mRNA is having codons, that are converted to amino acids by tRNA that carry anti-codons. the amoni acid sequence from tRNA is then translated to proteins by rRNA. So, translator RNA is rRNA.
Soluble RNA was originally called this because a soluble segment of RNA from liver cells that did not sediment (settle at the bottom/come out of suspension) after several hours of centrifuging lead to the discovery of this type of RNA. Soluble RNA is an outdated term - the current term used for this type of RNA is transfer RNA, or tRNA.
of course its a type of RNA it has RNA in its name
DNA code is copied to messenger RNA, abbreviated mRNA.
If a molecule of mRNA has AUG as its codon, what anticodon must its complementary tRNA contain?
Both DNA and RNA are macromolecules called nucleic acid's
Soluble RNA was originally called this because a soluble segment of RNA from liver cells that did not sediment (settle at the bottom/come out of suspension) after several hours of centrifuging lead to the discovery of this type of RNA. Soluble RNA is an outdated term - the current term used for this type of RNA is transfer RNA, or tRNA.
of course its a type of RNA it has RNA in its name
The answer is mRNA.
DNA code is copied to messenger RNA, abbreviated mRNA.
mRNA (messenger RNA)
If a molecule of mRNA has AUG as its codon, what anticodon must its complementary tRNA contain?
Both DNA and RNA are macromolecules called nucleic acid's
the one that breaks it is called Helicase and the one that adds it is called Polymerase.
Transfer RNA(:
RNA is natural polymer.
Pathogenic RNA is called a retrovirus.
I'm not sure there IS an RNA that helps in the production of ribosomes, but there is a type of RNA that is part of the ribosomal structure. It's called rRNA, or ribosomal Ribonucleic Acids.