There are three stages where RNA transcription occurs. They are initiation, chain elongation, and termination. All are very important in the cell.
Viral RNA uses the normal processes of a cell to manufacture more viruses.
That's what retroviruses do. They use the host cell's reverse transcriptase enzyme to manufacture DNA from the virus' RNA
RNA
Transcription and translation are the two processes necessary to build a protein based upon genetic information within DNA. Transcription is the term used for the construction of a messenger RNA (mRNA) molecule based on the DNA template. Translation refers to the processes of building a protein based upon the mRNA template.
Dna transcription, the production of messenger Rna.
+RNA viruses
They use messenger RNA and transfer RNA.
Yeast is used as a source of RNA because it is rich in RNA content, making it a valuable source for studying RNA-related processes. Yeast RNA shares similarities with RNA in human cells, allowing researchers to study gene expression, RNA processing, and other biological processes using yeast as a model organism. Additionally, yeast is easy to culture and manipulate in the lab, making it a convenient source of RNA for experimental studies.
One such processes will be anything to do with the DNA. The job of the DNA is finished when the transcription of the mRNA is complete.
The genetic material that viruses have is RNA. Viruses are unable to truly carry out the processes associated with holding their own DNA.
Transfer RNA delivers specific amino acids to the ribosome, matching messenger RNA codons.
Not very specific, but--RNA reads the DNA then uses the info to build proteins (from amino acids) that the cell uses for a varity of processes. this answer is deffinatly wrong...