No. The purpose of translation is to convert the sequence of nitrogen bases in the messenger RNA (mRNA) to synthesize proteins.
Nothing converts DNA into RNA, but instead a new strand enters the double helical DNA which later becomes the mRNA.
No. DNA is not translated into RNA. The DNA code is transcribed into messenger RNA (mRNA) using DNA as a template. Then the mRNA template is translated by transfer RNA (tRNA) at the ribosome. During translation, the proper amino acids are assembled in the correct order as tRNAs attach to amino acids in the cytoplasm and bring them to the ribosomes where the process of building the amino acid sequence takes place. So transcription involves the production of mRNA using the DNA as a template, and translation involves tRNA bringing the correct amino acids in the correct sequence to the ribosome.
translation represents rna to protein. at this stage the mrna is converted to protein in the cytosol in eukaryotes
Translation
ribosomal RNA and transfer RNA
rna
RNA Polymerase.
RNA is not converted into protein, it codes for protein.
translation
Translation
ribosomal RNA and transfer RNA
Translation
RNA Polymerase.
rna
a protein
The molecule produced after translation of RNA is protein.
transcription
In translation (RNA to Protein) a ribosome attaches to an mRNA strand and uses the mRNA to create a protein. There are other types of RNA and protein that can modify the mRNA strand but ribosomes are the main structure involved in translation.
RNA is not converted into protein, it codes for protein.
The process of assembling a protein from RNA (specially the messenger RNA or mRNA) is called translation and occurs in the ribosomes.