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Example Questions
Example Question #11 : Translation
What is the result of a missense mutation?
Inclusion of a different amino acid
Early termination of translation
A shift in the reading frame that results in a nearly completely different protein
There is no change to the peptide product
Inclusion of a different amino acid
Missense mutations are point mutations that cause a single amino acid in a protein to be changed. This may or may not affect the functionality of the protein. When one amino acid is replaced by another amino acid from the same class, such as replacing one polar amino acid with another, functionality is usually retained. When an amino acid from a different class is used, such as replacing an acidic amino acid with a basic amino acid, the protein folding may be affected and functionality may fail.
The other answers describe other types of mutations. Silent result in no change to the protein primary structure. Nonsense mutations cause early termination. Frameshift mutations shift the reading frame of the codon sequence, severely altering the protein composition.
Example Question #11 : Understanding Translation Processes
Which of the following is not a step for the elongation process of translation?
All of these are involved in elongation
Peptide bond formation
RNA splicing
Translocation
Codon recognition
RNA splicing
The three steps for the elongation process of translation are codon recognition, peptide bond formation, and translocation. These steps essentially correspond to the different tRNA positions in the ribosome. tRNA enters and matches the codon of the mRNA strand. A peptide bond is then formed between the tRNA amino acid and the ribosomal amino acid chain. The empty tRNA and peptide strand then shift to make room for the next residue to enter to ribosome structure.
RNA spicing occurs in the nucleus as part of post-transcriptional modification. Introns are removed to generate a mature mRNA strand before translation can occur.
Example Question #11 : Understanding Translation Processes
Which of the following is not involved in the process of translation?
rRNA
tRNA
All of these are involved in the process of translation
hnRNA
mRNA
hnRNA
Transcription leads to the production of hnRNA (heterogeneous nuclear RNA), which primarily consists of pre-mRNA and must go through processing and modification to form mRNA and leave the nucleus.
The other three choices, mRNA (messenger RNA), tRNA (transfer RNA), and rRNA (ribosomal RNA), all play active roles in the process of translation. mRNA serves as the codon template. tRNA matches anticodons to mRNA and carries amino acids. rRNA forms a large part of the ribosome structure and plays a functional role as the site of translation.
Example Question #12 : Understanding Translation Processes
What is the end result of translation?
A molecule of RNA
An enzyme
A transport vesicle
A polypeptide chain
A molecule of DNA
A polypeptide chain
Translation is the process of making a polypeptide chain from an mRNA template. No new molecules of RNA or DNA are synthesized during this process. tRNA is used to bring amino acids to the ribosome, binding an anticodon to the exposed codon of mRNA. The amino acid is then released from the tRNA and added to the growing chain of amino acids attached to the ribosome. When the ribosome reaches a stop codon, it releases the mRNA strand and amino acid sequence. The amino acid sequence is the final result of translation, and is known as a polypeptide.
Polypeptides can then undergo folding to become functional proteins. All enzymes are proteins, but not all proteins go on to become enzymes; some serve other functions.
Example Question #84 : Dna, Rna, And Proteins
What is the nucleotide triplet found on mRNA strands called?
Codon
P-site
Release factor
Anti-codon
Codon
The mRNA strand is translated into a protein using triplets, or three nucleotides. Each triplet is called a codon. Messenger or mRNA codons bind to complementary anti-codons on tRNA molecules, which carry the corresponding amino acids.
Example Question #13 : Translation
Which nucleotide in the mRNA codon is called the wobble position?
All positions can wobble
Second position
First position
Third position
Third position
The wobble position refers to the ability of the third position nucleotide of the codon and first position nucleotide of the anticodon tRNA sequence (when reading in a 5’ to 3’ direction) to exhibit non-standard base pairing. This allows fewer tRNA molecules to exist because a tRNA molecule is able to bind to more than one codon, which increases efficiency.
Example Question #85 : Dna, Rna, And Proteins
Which of the following molecules provides the energy for elongation of the polypeptide chain during translation?
ADP
ATP
GTP
GDP
GTP
During the elongation stage of translation, GTP is used to provide the energy to translocate a tRNA molecule from the A-site to the P-site. GTP is also required to move the ribosome down the mRNA strand to the next codon.
Example Question #16 : Translation
What is the role of release factors in the termination stage of translation?
Recognize the stop codon
Repress translation
Bind to ribosomes to stimulate polypeptide chain release
Assist the tRNA molecule carrying the terminator amino acid
Recognize the stop codon
In translation, stop codons within the mRNA strand signal the termination of the protein sequence to be translated. The stop codon nucleotide triplets are UAG, UGA, and UAA. Stop codons do not bind to an anticodon within a tRNA molecule, but rather to release factors. Release factors are proteins that recognize stop codons. The binding of release factors triggers the disassembly of the translational apparatus.
Example Question #17 : Translation
During the termination stage of translation, how is the polypeptide chain released?
The chain is cleaved by release factors
Hydrolysis reaction releases the chain from the last tRNA molecule in the P-site
Exonuclease activity frees the polypeptide chain
Condensation reaction releases the chain from the last tRNA molecule
Hydrolysis reaction releases the chain from the last tRNA molecule in the P-site
When the ribosome reaches a stop codon within the mRNA strand, a release factor binds to the ribosome. The release factor triggers the disassembly of the translational apparatus and release of the polypeptide chain. The polypeptide chain is released through the hydrolysis of the bond linking the chain to the tRNA. This reaction is catalyzed by peptidyl transferase.
Example Question #20 : Translation
Where does translation take place in eukaryotes?
Nucleus
Cytosol
Golgi apparatus
Nuclear membrane
Cytosol
Translation is the process where ribosomes synthesize proteins from an mRNA strand. In eukaryotes, this process occurs in the cytosol with free ribosomes or across the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum using membrane-bound ribosomes. In prokaryotes, translation occurs in the cytoplasm.
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