BIOL 150 Lecture Notes - Lecture 9: Eukaryotic Translation, Tata Box, Transfer Rna

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15 Mar 2018
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Biol 150 principles of molecular & cellular biology. We reviewed the use of splicing in eukaryotes as a way to generate multiple types of proteins from a single gene. The first exon is usually linked to the tata box (promoter) of the eukaryotic gene. The last exon generally is next to the polya site of the gene. In our groups, we re-emphasized how many different proteins can be made from a single gene, by looking at the possible splice forms could potentially arise from a gene with 4 exons. We turned to look at how eukaryotic cells translate mrna to make protein. As in transcription, the process involves a large machine (ribosome) binding to the nucleotide sequence (mrna) to be read. Initiation is the process by which the ribosome is placed in alignment on the mrna in alignment. Elongation repeatedly adds a subunit (peptide) to the growing chain, and termination releases the protein and mrna.

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