Term
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Definition
The process of making a linear chain of amino acids (aka a polypeptide) in which the amino acids are joined by peptide bonds. |
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Term
What is the sequence of amino acids in the polypeptide chain determined by? |
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Definition
The sequence of nucleotides in the mRNA. |
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Term
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Definition
Every 3 nucleotides in the mRNA that codes for an amino acid. |
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Term
What are the 3 components of Protein Synthesis? |
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Definition
mRNA, tRNA/aminoactyl-synthases, ribosoems. |
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Term
tRNA's and aminoacetyl-synthases |
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Definition
the components that actually perform the translation from nucleotide to amino acid language. |
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Term
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Definition
has the sequence information (from the gene)that determines amino acid sequence of protein. |
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Term
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Definition
The work benches where translation takes place and the source of enzymatic activity (peptidyl transferase) for peptide bond formation. |
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Term
What is the structure of tRNA? |
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Definition
Small RNA's with conserved clover-leaf structure. |
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Term
How many different aminoacetyl-synthases are there? |
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Definition
20; one for each of the amino acids. |
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Term
Charged tRNA/ Activated Amino Acid |
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Definition
recognize unique sequence and structural features of the tRNA and attach appropriate amino acid to the tRNA. |
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Term
Where is the energy derived from to create avtivated amino acids? |
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Definition
High energy phosphate bonds in ATP. |
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Term
What are ribosomes made of? |
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Definition
Large complexes of protein and rRNA (composed of 2 subunits: large and small) |
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Term
What do ribosomes do when they are not synthesizing proteins? |
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Definition
The subunits are not connected-they float free in the cytoplasm. |
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Term
What are the three sites for binding tRNA on ribosomes? |
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Definition
(p) a peptidyl site, (a) an aminoacyl site, (e) an exit site |
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Term
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Definition
recognizes different codons in mRNA by complementary base pairing |
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Term
Initiation of Translation |
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Definition
1. the small subunit of the ribosome binds near the 5' end of mRNA 2. a special "initiator" tRNA charged with methionine then base pairs with the universal start codon AUG. 3. the large robosomal subunit then attaches. this attachment uses energy provided by the hydrolysis of GTP. In this "initiation complex" the charged tRNA is positioned in the P site of the ribosome. |
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Term
Elongation of Translation |
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Definition
1. tRNA with anticodon complementary to next codon in mRNA binds to A site 2. amino acid in P site cleaved from tRNA and attached to amino acid in A site with new peptide bond. 3. peptide bond is catalyzed by "peptidyl transferase", an exnzyme that is really a ribozyme (rRNA) 4. mRNA and attached tRNAs threaded towards left (translocation) 5. Places growing polypeptide chain in P site and an uncharged tRNA in E site where it exits from the ribosome. 6. Now ready for another cycle of amino acid addition and peptide bond formation |
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Term
Amino acids are joined by _______________________. |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
linear chain of amino acids |
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Term
Polypeptides have __________ and ____________ ends. |
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Definition
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Term
What do functional proteins consist of? |
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Definition
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Term
Polypeptides chains have ___________. |
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Definition
polarity- N and C terminus |
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Term
When does elongation stop? |
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Definition
when a stop codon is encountered |
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Term
No tRNA has _________________. |
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Definition
an anticodon that can bind to a stop codon. Insteaad special protein release factors bind to the A site and the protein is release and the robosome disssassociates into large and small subunit (requires two GTP) |
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Term
How long does it take to synthesize an average sized protein? |
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Definition
half a minute (200-500 amino acids) |
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Term
How is the rate of protein production increased? |
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Definition
Having multiple ribosomes attach and translate mRNA at the same time (polyribosomes). |
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Term
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Definition
heritable changes in the base pair sequence of DNA (the DNA is not chemically damaged, it just has a different sequence of base pairs) |
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Term
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Definition
changes in just one base pair of the DNA. The change of even a single nucleotide in a DNA template strand can lead to the production of an abnormal protein. |
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Term
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Definition
replaces one nucleotide and its partner with another pair of nucleotides. |
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Term
What are the 3 types of base-pair substitutions? |
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Definition
1. silent mutations 2. missense mutations 3. nonsense mutations |
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Term
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Definition
no effect on the amino acid produced by a codon because of the redundancy in the genetic code. |
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Term
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Definition
code for an amino acid, but the amino acid is different from that encoded in the original, unmutated gene |
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Term
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Definition
change an amino acid codon in a stop codon, nearly always leading to a nonfunctional protein |
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Term
What type of mutation leads to sickle cell anemia? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
when they occur in protein coding region of a gene, they typically will have more severe effects on the encoded protein than more substitutions (frameshift effect). |
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