Translation - High School Biology

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Question

What is the purpose of tRNA in translation?

Answer

tRNA is responsible for bringing individual amino acids to the ribosome in order to be incorporated into the protein. It has an anticodon that attaches to a specific codon found on the mRNA. Once the tRNA and mRNA are bound, a peptide bond if formed between the amino acid residue from the tRNA and the amino acid chain on the ribosome. This is how amino acids are added to the growing protein.

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Question

Which of the following statements about the genetic code is true?

Answer

The genetic code is considered both degenerative and unambiguous. A codon will only code for one amino acid, making the code unambiguous. In contrast, multiple codons can code for the same amino acid, making it degenerative. For example, UGU will always code for cysteine, but UGC also codes for cysteine.

Nearly every living organism uses the same genetic code. tRNA anticodons are complementary to mRNA codons; they are not the same code.

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Question

During protein elongation, what site in the ribosome do tRNA molecules enter?

Answer

As amino acids are added to a polypeptide during translation, tRNA molecules will enter the A site of the ribosome. The tRNA is then transferred to the P site, where a peptide bond is formed between the amino acid residue and the amino acid chain. Finally, the tRNA moves to the E site to release its tRNA and exit the ribosome.

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Question

In eukaryotes, what are the sizes of the ribosomal subunits?

Answer

The small subunit of eukaryotic ribosomes is 40S and the large subunit is 60S. These combine to form the ribosome, which is 80S in sedimentary size.

For prokaryotes, the ribosome subunits are 30S and 50S to form a total of 70S total unit.

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Question

How many sites are there on the ribosome to house tRNA?

Answer

The ribosome contains three sites: the A, P, and E sites.

The A site is where activation occurs, starting translation. This is where a tRNA molecule enters the ribosome and matches its anticodon to the mRNA codon.

The tRNA then shifts over to the P site to attach the amino acid. The ribosome facilitates the formation of a peptide bond, adding the amino acid to the chain.

At the E site, the empty tRNA exits the ribosome and dissociates from mRNA.

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Question

Which of the following accurately illustrates the central dogma of biochemistry?

Answer

DNA contains genetic information that is transcribed into mRNA. This process is known as transcription, and occurs in the nucleus. After modification in the nucleus, mRNA exits the nucleus and enters the cell cytoplasm. In a process called translation, mRNA (in conjuction with tRNA and a ribosome) is used as a template to join amino acids to form specific polypeptides.

In summary, DNA is transcribed into RNA, which is translated into protein.

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Question

What ribosomal site does the first amino acid occupy during the initiation of translation?

Answer

During initiation, the first tRNA molecule will bring the first amino acid to the ribosome. Although the following amino acids will enter at the A site, the first amino acid is positioned in the middle P site. The large ribosomal subunit will then attach, and translation can begin.

During the subsequent elongation phase of translation, tRNA/amino acid complexes will enter the ribosome at the A site, transfer to the P site, and then exit through the E site. Only the first complex will begin in the P site, during initiation.

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Question

What portion of the ribosome does mRNA attach to during the beginning of translation?

Answer

At the beginning of translation, mature mRNA will travel into the cytosol and attach to the small ribosomal subunit first. This signals the larger subunit to come and attach in order to begin elongation of the polypeptide.

Note that ribosomes do not have an "active site." Active sites are the region of a protein that will bind a substrate and initiate a catalytic change. Ribosomes are not proteins; they are composed of ribosomal RNA (rRNA), and thus do not have active sites.

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Question

Anticodons pair with mRNA codons during which stage of protein synthesis?

Answer

During translation, the ribosome binds to mRNA and to the appropriate tRNAs. On the ribosome, the mRNA condons are translated into the amino acid sequence of a protein with the help of the tRNA anticodons.

Transcription refers to the synthesis of an RNA molecule from a DNA template. Transformation occurs when a bacterium is able to absorb and incorporate genetic material from the extracellular environment. Transfusion is the transfer of blood from a donor to a recipient. Transfection is the infection of bacteria by phage DNA.

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Question

Where is the anticodon located?

Answer

The tRNA carries the amino acid specified by its anticodon. The anticodon base pairs with the codon on the mRNA to ensure the correct amino acid is added to the new protein that is being made. Thus there is a specific tRNA for each codon.

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Question

What is the composition of ribosomes?

Answer

Ribosomes are made up of rRNA and proteins. rRNA synthesis, and ribosome assembly takes place in the nucleolus.

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Question

If a mature mRNA strand consists of 90 nucleotides, how many amino acids does the newly-translated the protein contain?

Answer

While one might quickly calculate that 90 nucleotides/3 would yield a 30 amino acid sequence, it is important to remember that while the first 3 nucleotides will encode for an amino acid to start translation (methionine), the last 3 nucleotides do not. They simply stop translation and signal for the growing polypeptide chain to be released from the ribosome-tRNA translation complex without actually adding another amino acid to the end of the chain.

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Question

The start codon is the first codon of a messenger RNA (mRNA) transcript translated by a ribosome.

Which of the following represents the start codon.

Answer

The start codon is the first codon of a messenger RNA (mRNA) transcript translated by a ribosome. The start codon always codes for methionine in eukaryotes, and a modified methionine (f-Met) in prokaryotes. The most common start codon is 5' AUG 3'. The start codon is preceded by a untranslated region which includes the ribosome binding site in prokaryotes.

5' UAA 3', 5' UGA 3', 5' UAG 3' are all stop codons.

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Question

The process of creating a protein from mRNA is known as __________.

Answer

Translation refers to the processing of an mRNA script into a protein. This process utilizes ribosomes and tRNA. In translation, messenger RNA (which is produced by transcription from DNA) is decoded by a ribosome to produce a specific amino acid chain, or polypeptide. The polypeptide is later folded into an active protein.

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Question

Which of the following is not a phase of translation?

Answer

Translation is the process of creating protein from an mRNA template, and consists of initiation, elongation, and termination. Modification of protein strands may occur after translation, but the three defined steps of translation are initiation, elongation, and termination. Many types of transcribed RNA, such as tRNA, rRNA (ribosomal), and small nuclear RNA, do not undergo translation in order to become functional proteins.

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Question

Which of the following best represents where the triplet anticodon is most commonly found?

Answer

Transfer RNA—tRNA—is a small folded RNA molecule (i.e. 80-90 nucleotides in length) utilized during translation. On the other hand, tRNA serves as a link between the messenger RNA—mRNA—and the growing protein’s amino acid sequence. The tRNA carries an amino acid to the ribosome directed by the mRNA’s codon—a three-nucleotide sequence. The tRNA carries an anticodon, which is also a three-nucleotide sequence that matches the genetic code, which complements the mRNA. Last, rRNA is associated with the ribosome.

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Question

Which of the following best describes the process of translation?

Answer

Protein synthesis starts in the nucleus with transcription. Transcription is the process where DNA is transcribed into mRNA. Translation occurs in the cytoplasm within ribosomes where mRNA is translated and becomes a protein with the help of rRNA and tRNA.

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