A ribosome, which is where mRNA is translated, has a P site and an A site.
Protein
The only reason why mRNA is transcribed is so it can be translated. All existing mRNA are translated and afterwards are broken down or are spliced for different uses.
mRNA is a short term intermediate and once processing is complete mRNA dissolves. During processing mRNA becomes degraded as it reads the codons.
The mRNA would then undergo post-transcriptional modifications before being translated by ribosomes.
A ribosome, which is where mRNA is translated, has a P site and an A site.
Protein
The only reason why mRNA is transcribed is so it can be translated. All existing mRNA are translated and afterwards are broken down or are spliced for different uses.
mRNA is a short term intermediate and once processing is complete mRNA dissolves. During processing mRNA becomes degraded as it reads the codons.
Transcription. This process is when the mRNA is made, edited, then sent out to be translated.
The mRNA would then undergo post-transcriptional modifications before being translated by ribosomes.
Transcription is the creation of an mRNA from a DNA template. The mRNA then carries the instructions to the ribosome where they are translated into a protein.
That question doesn't make sense. mRNA is created by transcription (i.e. DNA code to RNA code) and the mRNA is translated to proteins
Messenger RNA (mRNA) is transcribed from DNA. The mRNA is then translated into protein. http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/BiologyPages/T/Transcription.html
DNA is converted to a strand of mRNA to be translated in the ribosome.
The mRNA molecule attaches to a ribosome where it will be translated.
DNA is changed into mRNA. from there, the mRNA goes to a ribosome and is translated into amino acids.