tRNA Flashcards
what it the role of tRNA?
tRNA carries amino acids to the ribosomes during translation of mRNA
why does the tRNA molecule fold upon itself even though it is single stranded?
tRNA molecule folds upon itself due to hydrogen bonds formed between complementary regions at different parts of the molecule
how does being single stranded allow tRNA to carry out its role?
- being single-stranded (structural feature)
- allows for the formation of hydrogen bonds between complementary base pairs at different regions, causing the tRNA molecule to fold back on itself (1st point about significance to its role)
- the folding of the tRNA upon itself forms a 3D L-shaped structure of the tRNA to fit into the respective exit site, peptidyl-tRNA site, and aminoacyl-tRNA site on the large ribosomal subunit (2nd point about significance to its role)
how does having an amino acid attachment site at the 3’ end of the tRNA molecule allow tRNA to carry out its role?
- the amino acid attachment site at the 3’ end of the tRNA molecule (structural feature)
- allows for the attachment of specific activated amino acids to form an aminoacyl-tRNA complex, enabling the tRNA molecule to carry a specific amino acid to the ribosome during translation (significance to its role)
how does having an anticodon enable tRNA to carry out its role?
- the anticodon (structural feature)
- forms complementary base pairs with the codon of the mRNA, ensuring that the correct amino acyl-tRNA complex occupies the ‘P’ site & ‘A’ site of the ribosome during translation (1st point about significance to its role),
- so that the amino acid sequence on the polypeptide chain that is coded for by the gene is correct (2nd point about significance to its role)
what is amino acid activation?
it is the attachment of a specific amino acid to its tRNA
what is amino acid activation?
it is the attachment of a specific amino acid to its tRNA
where is the specific amino acid attached?
to the 3’ end of the tRNA molecule
what is aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase, and what is its function?
aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase is an enzyme, and it catalyzes the attachment of a specific amino acid to its tRNA
why is there a specific tRNA for each amino acid?
it is due to the specificity of the active site of aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase
explain how aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase is specific [2]
- it has an active site consisting of 2 binding sites [0.5]
- with the binding sites being complementary in shape to the shape of the specific amino acid [0.5]
- and the shape of the anticodon of a specific tRNA molecule [0.5]
- the enzyme ensures that the specific amino acid is joined to the specific tRNA during amino acid activation [0.5]
why are there at least 20 aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases?
- it is because there are at least 20 different tRNA molecules in a cell, with at least 1 for each of the 20 amino acids required for protein synthesis
- also, as each aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase is highly specific & attaches a specific amino acid correctly to a tRNA, hence, there are at least 20 aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases