BIO 1140 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Nuclear Pore, Endomembrane System, Nuclear Membrane

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Eukaryotic cell organelles: have endomembrane system (little compartments making up a whole) Nucleus: where dna is located, contains chromatin/chromosomes, part of endomembrane system. Has nuclear pores allowing things to enter/exit nucleus (protection: need pores so that the chromosomes don"t get damaged from the enzymes in the cytoplasm), mrna is produced inside the nucleus in dna. Nucleolus: rna to build ribosomes and then exported. Nuclear membrane: nuclear pore complex is a network of protein forming the pores, needs two layers of proteins to protect, protein are important to activate (open/close) the (active) pore. Allows passage of mrna, protein in and out of the nucleus. Translation: conversion of mrna to protein (by ribosomes), ribosomes have two subunits (not made of trna, accommodate trna), made up of rrna. Ribosomes: two subunits are made up of protein (size of protein depends on the organism you"re looking at)

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