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The ribosome use these amino acids to assemble new?

Ribosomes use messenger RNA or mRNA and transfer RNA or tRNA to encode Proteinogenic amino acids into protein. (If you want a further explanation, comment and I'll be happy to explain/share a link)


What structure is responsible for producing new molecules?

The cell's ribosomes are responsible for producing new molecules through protein synthesis. Ribosomes read the instructions carried by messenger RNA (mRNA) and assemble amino acids into proteins.


Ribosomes assemble what to make proteins?

tRNA brings amino acids from the cytoplasm to the ribosome to be assembled into a protein. The tRNA anticodon pairs with its complimentary mRNA codon in order to place the amino acid in the correct sequence.


What part of a cell assembles proteins at organelles?

Proteins are assembled in ribosomes


What cell assembles proteins?

All the proteins in the cells are made in ribosomes. After polypeptide synthesis they got matured and folded in ER, and Golgi bodies. There is no specific cells that only assembles proteins. All the cells of our body does it.


What is the organelle that starts the process of making proteins?

The organelle that starts the process of making proteins is the ribosome. Ribosomes are responsible for protein synthesis, where they read the messenger RNA (mRNA) and assemble the amino acids into a protein chain according to the genetic code.


Where is the sites of protein sythesis?

Protein synthesis occurs in two steps- Transcription and Translation. Transcription is where a copy of the relevant Dna is made in order to make the right protein. This occurs within the nucleus, where the Dna is. Messenger Rnas are the result that are exported from the nucleus. Translation is when the copy of the Dna - the mRna's - are used to match up the parts of the protein in order to make it, and this occurs in the cytoplasm of the Cell, specifically at the rough endoplasmic reticulum - studded with Ribosomes, where precursors of proteins - amino acids - are waiting to form whole proteins.


How do cow proteins change into human proteins after we eat them?

The digestive system breaks all proteins (regardless of source) that we eat into individual amino acids. Amino acids are indistinguishable from one source to another and from one protein to another.When cells need to assemble new proteins they follow the instructions in their own genes (not the genes of a different organism) to select from available amino acids to link them together to build a new protein molecule.


What role do amino acids play in protein synthesis?

Protein synthesis is the process of putting amino acids together to form a protein. So it's not a matter of which amino acids are vital. If you are asking which amino acids are vital in the synthesis of a specific protein, that would totally depend on which protein you are making.


What is the process called of making nonessential amino acids?

The process of making nonessential amino acids is called "transamination." During transamination, an amino group is transferred from one amino acid to a keto acid, resulting in the formation of a new amino acid. This process allows the body to synthesize nonessential amino acids from other amino acids and is crucial for maintaining the balance of amino acids in the body. Additionally, some nonessential amino acids can also be synthesized from simple precursors through other metabolic pathways.


Where are essential amino acids converted to non essential amino acids?

Essential amino acids are converted to non-essential amino acids through the process of transamination in the liver. This process involves the transfer of an amino group from an essential amino acid to a keto acid, producing a non-essential amino acid and a new keto acid. The non-essential amino acids can then be used in the synthesis of proteins or other important molecules in the body.


What is the role of RNA in translation?

RNA (specifically mRNA in eukaryotes) serves as the template that the ribosomes read in order to make the protein. Each amino acid is encoded by three bases of RNA (called a codon). tRNA molecules in the cell bind to the amino acids - a specific tRNA for each amino acid. The tRNA molecules recognise the codons and bind to them thus presenting the appropriate amino acid to the ribosome for he generation of the new protein. There is actually another class of RNA that is now known to be inolved in translation in mammals called microRNA (microRNAs exist in most if not all eukaryotes, but their function differs slightly). In mammals, microRNAs bind to mRNAs and prevent them from being translated. This is a post-transcriptional control of translation.