Biochemistry 2280A Chapter Notes - Chapter 7: Rna Splicing, Eukaryotic Transcription, Regulatory Sequence

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From dna to protein: how cells read the genome. Proteins are the principal constituents of cells: determine cell structure and cell function. Function determined by the sequence of the 20 different amino acid subunits in its polypeptide chain. Each type of protein has its own unique amino acid sequence dictates how it folds to form a molecule w a distinct shape and chemistry. Genetic info in dna must specify amino acid sequence of proteins. When a particular protein is needed by the cell, the nucleotide sequence of the appropriate segment of a dna molecule is first copied into rna: rna copies are used to direct synthesis of protein. Flow of genetic information: dna rna protein: this occurs in all living cells. Translation: information in rna to make protein. Rna splicing: in eukaryotic cells, segments of rna transcript are removed and remaining segments are stitched together before rna is translated into protein.

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