Bite-Sized Biochemistry #48 – Translation II (Protein Synthesis) – Video



03-08-2011 17:48 Lecture by Kevin Ahern of Oregon State University discussing Biochemistry Basics in BB 451. See the full course at oregonstate.edu This course can be taken for credit (wherever you live) via OSU's ecampus. For details, see ecampus.oregonstate.edu Download Metabolic Melodies at http://www.davincipress.com Related courses include BB 350 - oregonstate.edu BB 450 - oregonstate.edu BB 100 - oregonstate.edu Highlights Translation II 1. The anticodon loop has three bases complementary to the codon in the mRNA. tRNAs provide the translation function between nucleic acid sequence and amino acids. The anticodon loop frequently contains the inosine base. The base at the 3' end of the codon of the mRNA (corresponds to the base at the 5' end of the anticodon in the tRNA) is called the wobble base because it is less important for specifying the amino acid to be inserted than the first two bases. 2. Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases have the ability to recognize and correct errors in joining of amino acids to tRNAs. 3. Two regions of aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases are important for editing - called the activation site and the editing site. 4. There are two classes of amino acid tRNA synthetases. They differ in the way they bind tRNAs and in which hydroxyl of the ribose ring they attach the amino acid to. 5. Base pairings in RNA are slightly different than in DNA. For example, GU base pairs are not unstable. "I" (inosine) can also pair with C,U, or A. 6. In the genetic code, there are 64 possible ...

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Bite-Sized Biochemistry #48 - Translation II (Protein Synthesis) - Video

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