Describe the role of ribosomes in protein synthesis?
1 Answer
I'll describe the tRNA and ribosome roles in protein synthesis here.
Explanation:
I usually explain everything like this by using analogy, so if you need a more scientific explanation, I can also help (I studied RNA structure in graduate school :) ).
Simply stated, the ribosome is the enzyme that produces the peptide bond, and it does this over and over and over to produce many, many peptide bonds that result in a long polypeptide, that eventually folds into a protein. So ribosomes are the enzyme that produce proteins.
In this case, ribosomes are like a big 3D printer. In this 3D printer, you need two essential things! PLANS for making the cool stuff (mRNA) and the building material for making the stuff (tRNA...technically, charged tRNA....or AA-tRNA).
tRNA molecules are just like all the other RNA molecules (rRNA, siRNA, mRNA, tRNA, spliceosomal RNA, etc). What i mean by "same" is they are all made out of nucleotides
So, tRNA have two major important parts - the
Now for the dance. The plans are on the mRNA, and they are kinda boring. Just
Ok, so the mRNA gets put on the floor and the 3D printer (ribosome) stands over a 3-nucleotide section of the mRNA:
Now you've got a peptide bond...and as the ribosome continues down the mRNA, it adds more and more amino acids (that correspond to the CODONS...and eventually you get a polypeptide that gets folded into a protein.
Ok, I sort of skipped over the aminoacyl transfer reaction part, and the