translation
synthesis of a polypeptide using information from the mRNA
a nucleotide sequence becomes
an amino acid sequence
tRNA is a key player in
translating mRNA to an amino acid sequence
transfer RNA
has an anticodon region which is complementary and antiparallel to mRNA
tRNA carries
the amino acid that the mRNA codon codes for
enzyme aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase is responsible for
attaching amino acids to tRNA
when tRNA carries an amino acid it is
“charged”
translation occurs at the
ribosome
ribosomes have two subunits
small and large
prokaryote subunit
small subunit (30s) large subunit (40s)
eukaryote subunit
small subunit (40s) large subunit (60s)
large subunit has three sites
A, P, and E
A site
amino acid site
holds the next tRNA carrying an amino acid
P site
polypeptide site
holds the tRNA carrying the growing polypeptide chain
E site
exit site
initiation
elongation
common ancestry
idea that all organisms use the same genetic code
elongation steps order
codon recognition
peptide bond formation
translocation
codon recognition
appropriate anticodon of next tRNA goes to A-site
peptide bond formation
peptide bonds are formed that transfer the polypeptide to A site tRNA
translocation
tRNA in A site moves to P site, tRNA in P site goes to E site. A site is open for next tRNA
termination
release factor