Molecular Genetics - Translation Flashcards
1
Q
What is translation and where does it occur in the cell?
A
- The process by which info coded in an mRNA molecule is interpreted, linking amino acids to make a polypeptide
- Occurs in the cytosol
2
Q
What components are needed for translation to occur?
A
- Mature mRNA transcript
- A ribosome
- tRNA
3
Q
What are the 3 stages in translation?
A
- Initiation
- Elongation
- Termination
(same names as transcription)
4
Q
What are ribosomes made up of?
A
- rRNA molecules combined with ribosomal proteins, forming 2 ribosomal subunits
- Small subunit (40s) and large subunit (60s), do not combine until they have mRNA to translate
- mRNA fits between the 2 subunits
- Eukaryotes: 4 rRNA and 82 protein molecules in complete ribosome
- Prokaryotes: smaller ribosomes
5
Q
How is tRNA used in translation?
A
- tRNA delivers amino acids to ribosome
mRNA “read” by ribosome in 3-nucleotide groups called codons - Each codon specific specific amino acid to be incorporated to the forming amino acid chain
- A tRNA anticodon (complementary to codon) specifies the amino acid the tRNA is carrying
6
Q
What occurs during the initiation stage of translation?
A
- Large and small subunits bind to an mRNA
- Ribosome must recognize start codon AUG at 5’ end of mRNA
- AUG starts translation by “opening the reading frame” (the order in which codons are recoded by ribosome)
- A tRNA w/ anticodon UAC + “charged” w/ methionine enters ribosome in P site, codon/anticodon base pairing occurs
7
Q
What are the 3 sites within the ribosome?
A
A = aminoacyl site
P = peptidyl site
E = exit site
- Sites move relative to mRNA sequence
8
Q
What occurs in the elongation stage of translation?
A
- Individual amino acids are sequentially added to the growing polypeptide
- A second charged tRNA (with complementary anticodon to next codon on mRNA) enters ribosome in A site and base pairs
- Peptide bond forms between the two amino acids
- Methionine is released from its tRNA + new dipeptide stays attached to second tRNA
- Ribosome then “slides” along mRNA (5’ to 3’) to enclose third codon
- First codon now in E site, tRNA detaches from mRNA and can bond a new amino acid
- Process continues until all codons on mRNA have been “read”
9
Q
What occurs in the termination stage of translation?
A
- Ribosome eventually reaches STOP codon
- No tRNAs w/ anticodons complementary to stop codon, causes ribosome to “stall” on mRNA
- This stimulates a “release factor” protein to release polypeptide from ribosome
- Ribosome then “falls off” mRNA by separating into subunits
10
Q
What is wobble pairing and how does it allow for the redundancy in our genetic code?
A
- Sometimes tRNA with incorrect anticodon is “allowed” to pair with codon on mRNA
- Only occurs in situations where tRNA is carrying correct amino acid
- Redundancy: since amino acids may be carried by several different tRNA molecules + be coded for by several codons, “imperfect” codon-anticodon binding is allowed
11
Q
What is a reading frame and why is it important for proper translation?
A
- The order in which codons are decoded by ribosome
- Depending on where you start “reading” mRNA sequence, the codons created will be different
- In order to produce polypeptide w/ correct amino acid sequence, the ribosome must recognize where to start reading the codons
- The start of the reading frame is dictated by the start codon