Cytoplasm.
mRNA joins with ribosomes in the cytoplasm during translation to facilitate the synthesis of proteins.
The type of nucleic acid that carries the code for making proteins from the nucleus to the ribosome is messenger RNA (mRNA). mRNA is transcribed from DNA in the nucleus and then carries the genetic information to the ribosome where it is translated into proteins.
Messenger RNA (mRNA) is the type of RNA that carries genetic information from the nucleus to the ribosome for protein synthesis. It serves as a template for protein production during the process of translation.
The mirrorlike copy of DNA that moves from the nucleus to the ribosome is called messenger RNA (mRNA). It carries the genetic information from DNA to the ribosome, where it is used as a template for protein synthesis.
In protein synthesis, peptide bonds are formed in the ribosome, not in the nucleus. The nucleus is responsible for housing the DNA and transcribing it into messenger RNA (mRNA) for protein synthesis to occur in the ribosome.
mRNA joins with ribosomes in the cytoplasm during translation to facilitate the synthesis of proteins.
The molecule responsible for carrying the genetic information from DNA in the nucleus to the ribosome is messenger RNA (mRNA). This process is called transcription and mRNA is synthesized in the nucleus and then travels to the ribosome in the cytoplasm where translation occurs.
mRNA is found in the nucleus of a cell, ribosome or the cytoplasm.
The type of nucleic acid that carries the code for making proteins from the nucleus to the ribosome is messenger RNA (mRNA). mRNA is transcribed from DNA in the nucleus and then carries the genetic information to the ribosome where it is translated into proteins.
Basically, mRNA carries a message away from the nucleus. The nucleus says hey, we need these proteins made, and mRNA is made by using RNA polymerase to copy the information on DNA. That mRNA then moves out of the nucleus to a ribosome, where rRNA and tRNA will interact with the mRNA, eventually resulting in the production of a fully functional protein.
mRNA
mRNA DNA is transcribed into mRNA by RNA polymerase II in the nucleus and then mRNA is translated into proteins by ribosomes in the cytoplasm.
The 5' cap of mRNA is important for several reasons: it protects the mRNA from degradation by exonucleases, helps in the recognition and binding of the mRNA by the ribosome for translation, and is essential for efficient splicing of introns.
Messenger RNA (mRNA) carries genetic information from the nucleus to the ribosome. It is synthesized during transcription in the nucleus and then transported to the cytoplasm where it serves as a template for protein synthesis at the ribosome.
Messenger RNA (mRNA) transfers information from the nucleus to the organelle, specifically the ribosome. This process is part of protein synthesis, where the mRNA carries the genetic code from the DNA in the nucleus to the ribosome, where the information is used to assemble proteins.
After mRNA leaves the nucleus, it travels to the cytoplasm.
Messenger RNA (mRNA) is the type of RNA that carries genetic information from the nucleus to the ribosome for protein synthesis. It serves as a template for protein production during the process of translation.