Translation

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Svedburg Unit

Measure of sedimentation velocity and, therefore, mass

Covalent Bond

Covalent chemical bond between two amino acids; connects the carboxyl group of one amino acid to the amino group of another. A series of peptide bonds and amino acids form a protein.

Elongation Phase

At the beginning of elongation, an initiator tRNA molecule occupies the P site of a ribosome assembled on the mRNA transcript. This initiator tRNA carries the amino acid formylmethionine. The ribosome moves along the mRNA in the 5'-to-3'direction, which requires the elongation factor G, in a process called translocation. The tRNA that corresponds to the second codon can then bind to the A site, a step that requires elongation factors (in E. coli, these are called EF-Tu and EF-Ts), as well as guanosine triphosphate (GTP) as an energy source for the process. Upon binding of the tRNA-amino acid complex in the A site, GTP is cleaved to form guanosine diphosphate (GDP), then released along with EF-Tu to be recycled by EF-Ts for the next round. The amino acid bound to the tRNA that occupies the P site is added to the amino acid bound to the tRNA that occupies the A site, forming a growing peptide chain. Peptide bonds are formed through a peptidyl transferase activity. The transferase activity is a catalytic function of rRNA After the peptide bond is formed, the ribosome shifts, or translocates, again, thus causing the tRNA to occupy the E site. The tRNA is then released to the cytoplasm to pick up another amino acid. In addition, the A site is now empty and ready to receive the tRNA for the next codon. The growing peptide chain is continuously transferred to the amino acid associated with the tRNA molecule located at the A site. This process is repeated until all the codons in the mRNA have been read by tRNA molecules, and the amino acids attached to the tRNAs have been linked together in the growing polypeptide chain in the appropriate order. At this point, translation must be terminated, and the nascent protein must be released from the mRNA and ribosome.

Ribosome

Cellular organelles that are the sites for translation of mRNA into protein. A complex molecule made of ribosomal RNA molecules and proteins that form a factory for protein synthesis in cells. The ribosome is composed of two subunits: the large (50S) subunit and the small (30S) subunit Each subunit exists separately in the cytoplasm, but the two join together on the mRNA molecule. The ribosomal subunits contain proteins and specialized RNA molecules—specifically, ribosomal RNA (rRNA) and transfer RNA (tRNA) Within the ribosome, the mRNA and aminoacyl-tRNA complexes are held together closely, which facilitates base-pairing

Transcription

DNA --> mRNA During transcription, the DNA of a gene serves as a template for complementary base-pairing, and an enzyme called RNA polymerase II catalyzes the formation of a pre-mRNA molecule, which is then processed to form mature mRNA

Translation + Eukaryotes

In eukaryotes, mature mRNA molecules must leave the nucleus and travel to the cytoplasm, where the ribosomes are located mRNAs have highly variable half-lives, are subject to modifications, and must exit the nucleus to be translated; these multiple steps offer additional opportunities to regulate levels of protein production, and thereby fine-tune gene expression

Translation + Prokaryotes

In prokaryotic organisms, ribosomes can attach to mRNA while it is still being transcribed. In this situation, translation begins at the 5' end of the mRNA while the 3' end is still attached to DNA

Methionine

Not all amino acids are equally likely to occur second in the chain, and the second amino acid influences whether the initial methionine is enzymatically removed

Large Ribosomal Subunit

The large subunit of the ribosome has three sites at which tRNA molecules can bind. The A (amino acid) site is the location at which the aminoacyl-tRNA anticodon base pairs up with the mRNA codon, ensuring that correct amino acid is added to the growing polypeptide chain. The P (polypeptide) site is the location at which the amino acid is transferred from its tRNA to the growing polypeptide chain. The E (exit) site is the location at which the "empty" tRNA sits before being released back into the cytoplasm to bind another amino acid and repeat the process. The initiator methionine tRNA is the only aminoacyl-tRNA that can bind in the P site of the ribosome, and the A site is aligned with the second mRNA codon. The ribosome is thus ready to bind the second aminoacyl-tRNA at the A site, which will be joined to the initiator methionine by the first peptide bond

UTR

The leader sequence is important because it contains a ribosome-binding site. I n bacteria, this site is known as the Shine-Dalgarno box (AGGAGG) A similar site in vertebrates was characterized by Marilyn Kozak and is thus known as the Kozak box. In bacterial mRNA, the 5' UTR is normally short; in human mRNA, the median length of the 5' UTR is about 170 nucleotides. If the leader is long, it may contain regulatory sequences, including binding sites for proteins, that can affect the stability of the mRNA or the efficiency of its translation

rRNA

The rRNA catalyzes the attachment of each new amino acid to the growing chain.

tRNA

The tRNA molecules are adaptor molecules—they have one end that can read the triplet code in the mRNA through complementary base-pairing, and another end that attaches to a specific amino acid

Start of Translation

The translation of mRNA begins with the formation of a complex on the mRNA Three initiation factor proteins (known as IF1, IF2, and IF3) bind to the small subunit of the ribosome. This preinitiation complex and a methionine-carrying tRNA then bind to the mRNA, near the AUG start codon, forming the initiation complex Once the initiation complex is formed on the mRNA, the large ribosomal subunit binds to this complex, which causes the release of IFs (initiation factors).

Termination

There are three termination codons that are employed at the end of a protein-coding sequence in mRNA: UAA, UAG, and UGA. No tRNAs recognize these codons. Thus, in the place of these tRNAs, one of several proteins, called release factors, binds and facilitates release of the mRNA from the ribosome and subsequent dissociation of the ribosome

Translation Initiation Complex

When translation begins, the small subunit of the ribosome and an initiator tRNA molecule assemble on the mRNA transcript. The small subunit of the ribosome has three binding sites: an amino acid site (A), a polypeptide site (P), and an exit site (E). The initiator tRNA molecule carrying the amino acid methionine binds to the AUG start codon of the mRNA transcript at the ribosome's P site where it will become the first amino acid incorporated into the growing polypeptide chain. In eukaryotes, the free initiator tRNA first binds the small ribosomal subunit to form a complex.The complex then binds the mRNA transcript, so that the tRNA and the small ribosomal subunit bind the mRNA simultaneously

Translation

mRNA --> amino acids Not all regions of an mRNA molecule correspond to particular amino acids. In particular, there is an area near the 5' end of the molecule that is known as the untranslated region (UTR) or leader sequence. This portion of mRNA is located between the first nucleotide that is transcribed and the start codon (AUG) of the coding region, and it does not affect the sequence of amino acids in a protein


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