protein synthesis

Cards (38)

  • What is active transport?
    It is the movement of particles from a low concentration to a higher concentration, requiring energy.
  • What are neurotransmitters?
    Chemicals released from axon terminals to carry impulses across synapses
  • What are the two stages in protein synthesis?

    Transcription and translation
  • What role does mRNA play in transcription?

    It reads the code on the DNA strand
  • What is the first step of transcription?
    RNA polymerase binds to a region of non-coding DNA in front of a gene
  • How does RNA polymerase create mRNA during transcription?

    It uses the coding DNA in the gene as a template
  • What is the role of the ribosome in translation?

    It is the site of protein synthesis
  • How are amino acids brought to the ribosome?

    By transfer RNA (tRNA)
  • What are the key steps in transcription?

    1. RNA polymerase binds to non-coding DNA
    2. DNA strands separate
    3. RNA polymerase synthesizes mRNA using the coding DNA as a template
    4. mRNA moves out of the nucleus to join a ribosome
  • What are the key steps in translation?
    1. mRNA binds to a ribosome
    2. tRNA brings amino acids to the ribosome
    3. Codons in mRNA match with anticodons in tRNA
    4. Amino acids are joined together to form a polypeptide (protein)
  • How do transcription and translation differ in protein synthesis?

    • Transcription: DNA to mRNA
    • Translation: mRNA to protein
  • What are the two key processes in protein synthesis?

    Transcription and translation
  • What is transcription in the context of protein synthesis?

    It is the process of creating an mRNA copy of a gene from DNA.
  • What are the steps involved in the process of transcription?

    1. Initiation: RNA polymerase binds to the promoter.
    2. Elongation: DNA unzips, and RNA polymerase creates mRNA.
    3. Termination: RNA polymerase reaches a termination sequence.
  • What occurs during the elongation phase of translation?

    tRNA molecules bring amino acids to the ribosome, matching anticodons to mRNA codons
  • What are the two main steps of protein synthesis?

    • Transcription
    • Translation
  • What happens to the DNA strands during transcription?

    The DNA strands separate to expose their bases
  • What is the template strand in transcription?

    The DNA strand that is used to make mRNA
  • What happens to the DNA after transcription is complete?
    The DNA strands close back up
  • what is transcription
    the copying of a single gene of DNA, to mRNA
  • where does transcription take place

    nucleus
  • why does transcription take place?/why does a gene of DNA have to be copied to mRNA?

    DNA is too large to leave the nucleus
  • how is mRNA different to DNA
    • mRNA is single stranded, DNA is double stranded
    • mRNA is shorter than DNA
  • where does the mRNA go when it leaves the nucleus and enters the cytoplasm?

    ribosomes
  • what is translation
    combination of amino acids to from a polypeptide
  • function of ribosomes
    assemble proteins from amino acids
  • polypeptide
    chain of amino acids
  • What happens to double-stranded DNA during transcription?
    It is 'un-zipped' to form mRNA.
  • What is the role of RNA polymerase in transcription?
    It joins the mRNA template together.
  • What is mRNA?
    It is a type of RNA that carries DNA code.
  • How does mRNA differ from DNA in terms of base pairing?
    Base A pairs with U instead of T.
  • Where does the mRNA template go after transcription?
    It leaves the nucleus.
  • What is the function of the mRNA template during translation?
    It guides protein synthesis on ribosomes.
  • What delivers specific amino acids during translation?
    tRNA delivers specific amino acids.
  • What is formed during protein synthesis?
    A polypeptide chain is formed.
  • What happens to the long protein chain after it is synthesized?
    It folds up, giving it a unique structure.
  • Why is the unique structure of a protein essential?
    It determines the protein's function.
  • What forms can proteins take based on their structure?
    Enzymes, hormones, or structural proteins.