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Example Questions
Example Question #121 : Dna, Rna, And Proteins
What is the purpose of tRNA in translation?
It carries an amino acid to the ribosome in order to be added to the growing polypeptide
It carries the newly formed protein to the Golgi apparatus in order to be modified
It transfers the mRNA to the ribosome for translation
It adds to proteins in order to form the ribosomes
It carries an amino acid to the ribosome in order to be added to the growing polypeptide
tRNA is responsible for bringing individual amino acids to the ribosome in order to be incorporated into the protein. It has an anticodon that attaches to a specific codon found on the mRNA. Once the tRNA and mRNA are bound, a peptide bond if formed between the amino acid residue from the tRNA and the amino acid chain on the ribosome. This is how amino acids are added to the growing protein.
Example Question #122 : Dna, Rna, And Proteins
In eukaryotes, what are the sizes of the ribosomal subunits?
30S and 70S
30S and 60S
40S and 60S
30S and 50S
40S and 50S
40S and 60S
The small subunit of eukaryotic ribosomes is 40S and the large subunit is 60S. These combine to form the ribosome, which is 80S in sedimentary size.
For prokaryotes, the ribosome subunits are 30S and 50S to form a total of 70S total unit.
Example Question #123 : Dna, Rna, And Proteins
What portion of the ribosome does mRNA attach to during the beginning of translation?
The tRNA chain
The active site
The small subunit
The large subunit
The small subunit
At the beginning of translation, mature mRNA will travel into the cytosol and attach to the small ribosomal subunit first. This signals the larger subunit to come and attach in order to begin elongation of the polypeptide.
Note that ribosomes do not have an "active site." Active sites are the region of a protein that will bind a substrate and initiate a catalytic change. Ribosomes are not proteins; they are composed of ribosomal RNA (rRNA), and thus do not have active sites.
Example Question #124 : Dna, Rna, And Proteins
Anticodons pair with mRNA codons during which stage of protein synthesis?
Transfusion
Transcription
Transfection
Translation
Transformation
Translation
During translation, the ribosome binds to mRNA and to the appropriate tRNAs. On the ribosome, the mRNA condons are translated into the amino acid sequence of a protein with the help of the tRNA anticodons.
Transcription refers to the synthesis of an RNA molecule from a DNA template. Transformation occurs when a bacterium is able to absorb and incorporate genetic material from the extracellular environment. Transfusion is the transfer of blood from a donor to a recipient. Transfection is the infection of bacteria by phage DNA.
Example Question #125 : Dna, Rna, And Proteins
Where is the anticodon located?
On the DNA
On the new protein being made
On the mRNA
On the tRNA
On the ribosome
On the tRNA
The tRNA carries the amino acid specified by its anticodon. The anticodon base pairs with the codon on the mRNA to ensure the correct amino acid is added to the new protein that is being made. Thus there is a specific tRNA for each codon.
Example Question #126 : Dna, Rna, And Proteins
What is the composition of ribosomes?
mRNA only
protein only
rRNA only
rRNA and protein
DNA only
rRNA and protein
Ribosomes are made up of rRNA and proteins. rRNA synthesis, and ribosome assembly takes place in the nucleolus.
Example Question #126 : Dna, Rna, And Proteins
Which of the following best represents where the triplet anticodon is most commonly found?
mRNA
rRNA
tRNA
DNA
tRNA
Transfer RNA—tRNA—is a small folded RNA molecule (i.e. 80-90 nucleotides in length) utilized during translation. On the other hand, tRNA serves as a link between the messenger RNA—mRNA—and the growing protein’s amino acid sequence. The tRNA carries an amino acid to the ribosome directed by the mRNA’s codon—a three-nucleotide sequence. The tRNA carries an anticodon, which is also a three-nucleotide sequence that matches the genetic code, which complements the mRNA. Last, rRNA is associated with the ribosome.
Example Question #127 : Dna, Rna, And Proteins
Ribosomes are involved in what level of protein folding?
None of these
Secondary structure
Tertiary structure
Primary structure
Quaternary structure
Primary structure
Ribosomes are responsible for translating mRNA into protein. tRNA molecules transport amino acids to the ribosome, where they are joined by peptide bonds to form a chain. This chain of amino acids is known as the protein primary structure.
Secondary structure, tertiary structure, and quaternary structure form in the cytoplasm or endoplasmic reticulum after the ribosome has released the polypeptide.
Example Question #122 : Dna, Rna, And Proteins
In which level of protein structure will you find alpha-helices and beta-sheets?
Secondary
Quaternary
Primary
Tertiary
Alpha-helices and beta-sheets are only found in the DNA double-helix
Secondary
Proteins have four levels of structure. Secondary structure involves the formation of alpha-helices and beta-sheets via hydrogen bonding between the amino acid backbone in the protein chain.
Primary protein structure simply refers to the linear sequence of amino acid residues in the polypeptide chain. After initial folding of the backbone in secondary structure, functional groups of the amino acids interact to generate tertiary structure. Tertiary structure contains hydrogen bonding, hydrophobic interactions, and disulfide bridges. Some proteins then develop quaternary structure, when multiple polypeptide chains are joined as subunits to build a large protein complex.
Example Question #3 : Understanding Protein Folding
Which of the following correctly describes the tertiary stucture of a protein?
Hydrogen bonding between the polypeptide backbone
Polypeptide sequence formed by individual amino acids
Interaction between multiple polypeptide subunits to form a functional protein structure
Hydrogen bonding and hydrophobic interaction between amino acid side chains
Formation of alpha-helices and beta-pleated sheets
Hydrogen bonding and hydrophobic interaction between amino acid side chains
Formation of a protein involves four distinct levels of structure. The tertiary structure is the third level of protein formation, and occurs when the side chains of the individual amino acids interact. These side chains can attract one another to form hydrogen bonds or disulfide bonds, or they can repel each other and contribute ot hydrophobic interactions. The result is a three-dimensional shape. This is the final level of structure to create a function protein subunit.
The primary structure of the protein is derived from the chain of amino acids synthesized during translation; this amino acid sequence is the primary structure. Secondary structure is generated from the interactions between amino and carboxyl groups in the polypeptide backbone. These groups can form hydrogen bonds to generate alpha-helices and beat-pleated sheets. Tertiary structure, as described above, results in a functional protein subunit. For some protiens, tertiary structure is the final step in folding. For other proetins, multiple subunits can be bound together to generate a quaternary structure.
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