mRNA exits the nucleus after it binds to TAP/p15 protein. This protein helps the mRNA through the hydrophobic nuclear pore.
Other RNAs bind to Exportine-proteins, which help them to pass the pore.
Transcription (DNA -> RNA) happens in the nucleus where RNA polymerase makes single-stranded RNA from a template DNA strand.
nucleus for eukaryotes, cytoplasm for prokaryotes.
Mostly the ribosomes. Or you could say the cytoplasm.
Nucleus
DNA polymerase replicated DNA. RNA polymerase creates mRNA to be used in protein synthesis. RNA polymerase does not replicated DNA.
Nuclear pores
Ribonucleic acid (RNA) enters the nucleus to deliver genetic information for protein synthesis, while messenger RNA (mRNA) leaves the nucleus to carry the information encoded in DNA to the ribosomes for protein synthesis.
RNA can leave the Nucleus.
Yes, RNA can leave the nucleus.
RNA is transcripted in the nucleus.
The RNA must have its introns (junk RNA) spliced out. It the must be processed by having a guanine cap and 100+ adenine tail added to it. Once all this is done, the now mature RNA can leave the nucleus to be translated.
Nucleus is built by many things.Not only with RNA.
RNA is located in the nucleus of a cell, specifically in the nucleolus and nucleoplasm.
RNA is found in the nucleus in the form of messenger RNA (mRNA), which carries the genetic information from DNA to the ribosomes in the cytoplasm for protein synthesis. RNA is also found in the nucleus as transfer RNA (tRNA) and ribosomal RNA (rRNA) which are involved in protein synthesis within the cell.
RNA is transcribed in the nucleus by an enzyme called RNA polymerase, using DNA as a template. The RNA is then processed, modified, and transported out of the nucleus for translation into proteins.
in eukaryotes, RNA is synthetised in the nucleus from DNA, using RNA-polymerase. in prokaryotes, RNA is synthetised in the cytoplasm (DNA has no nucleus), using RNA-polymerase as well.
Yes, RNA is able to leave the cell nucleus.