the "t" in tRNA stands for transfer. the whole thing would be Transfer Ribonucleic Acid the "t" in tRNA stand for transfer. therefore it would be Transfer Ribonucleic Acid
trna
The tRNA will not be recognized by tRNA synthetase and cannot be charged.
If a molecule of mRNA has AUG as its codon, what anticodon must its complementary tRNA contain?
trna does not carry structural informatio while mrna has several codons and the trna has one anti codon.
I think the 3 base sequence found on tRNA is called an anticodon
the "t" in tRNA stands for transfer. the whole thing would be Transfer Ribonucleic Acid the "t" in tRNA stand for transfer. therefore it would be Transfer Ribonucleic Acid
3, the A P E sites(they stand for something but i for got exactly what except for E for exit) A for amino acids entering, P for the amino acids to join together and E for the transport things to E exit
The shape of tRNA is specifically designed to be able to accept the amino acid according to its anticodon. If tRNA was in any other shape, aminoacyl tRNA synthetase, the enzyme that adds amino acid to tRNA, would not be able to transfer the amino acid to tRNA.
trna
Charged tRNA has an amino acid attached to it, ready for protein synthesis, while uncharged tRNA does not have an amino acid attached. Charged tRNA binds to the appropriate codon on the mRNA during translation, while uncharged tRNA cannot participate in translation.
The tRNA will not be recognized by tRNA synthetase and cannot be charged.
Transfer RNA (tRNA) carries the anticodon.
If a molecule of mRNA has AUG as its codon, what anticodon must its complementary tRNA contain?
trna does not carry structural informatio while mrna has several codons and the trna has one anti codon.
The tRNA molecules are found mainly in the cytoplasm. When the translation begins, the tRNA moves to the ribosometo supply it with the anticodon and the amino acid.
tRNA molecules attach to codons.-apex