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DNA tells a ribosome how to assemble a protein.
DNA contains genes that tells the body how to assemble proteins. The genes have a code that will communicate to amino acids to assemble the proteins.
DNA is like a master plan in that it has all the plans for all the proteins the body makes. RNA is like a blueprint because it carries the information that tells a a cell how to produce a specific protein.
Interesting question. To me, the most obvious answer is to draw an analogy between a ribosome and a shopper. The ribosome reads mRNA just as the shopper reads a grocery list. Each unit of mRNA is a three-letter code that tells the ribosome which amino acid it needs to add to make a complete protein, much in the same way that each item in a grocery list tells the shopper which items to pull from the shelves and add to their shopping cart.
carrying genetic informationDNA controls the production of certain proteins in the cell. Different DNA codes make different proteins. Proteins made in the cell bond together to make amino acids.
DNA tells a ribosome how to assemble a protein.
The number doesn't effect the types of proteins that a cell produces. The DNA tells the ribosome (in a round about way) what the protein will be.
Other answer: Ribosomes produce and assemble proteins throughout the cell. Therefore, building/ repairing parts of the cell <3 My Answer <3Small organelles composed of RNA-rich cytoplasmic granules that are sites of protein synthesis
DNA tells a ribosome how to assemble a protein.
Start codon
A ribosome makes protein when the nucleus tells it to.
DNA contains genes that tells the body how to assemble proteins. The genes have a code that will communicate to amino acids to assemble the proteins.
DNA is like a master plan in that it has all the plans for all the proteins the body makes. RNA is like a blueprint because it carries the information that tells a a cell how to produce a specific protein.
b vbg
cyclins proteins (cell regulators)
DNA is much like the "brain" of the cell. It contains genes that produce proteins through transcription (DNA--->RNA) and translation (RNA---->protein). Proteins are what give a cell its function (i.e. turns it from a generic cell into a muscle cell). in a nutshell, it basically tells the cell what to do.
Interesting question. To me, the most obvious answer is to draw an analogy between a ribosome and a shopper. The ribosome reads mRNA just as the shopper reads a grocery list. Each unit of mRNA is a three-letter code that tells the ribosome which amino acid it needs to add to make a complete protein, much in the same way that each item in a grocery list tells the shopper which items to pull from the shelves and add to their shopping cart.