Yes. Specifically mRNA carries copies of the instructions for making proteins from DNA to ribosomes, either free in the cytoplasm or attached to rough ER.
mRNA carries the code that was transcribed from DNA out to the ribosome to form the correct amino acid chain. So, yes, in a way mRNA is a messenger to the ribosomes since DNA cannot leave the nucleus.
copies the genetic code from the DNA molecule and carries it to the ribosome
RNA molecules are basically a cheap, yet reliable copy of your cell's DNA. To understand why RNA molecules are needed, you must first know that DNA is very precious. It is the only copy of instructions you cell has. Without it, everything your cells do would cease to happen, and your cells would shut down. Because it's so precious, DNA can't leave the protection of the nucleus, because there's too great a risk that it would be hurt. So, it makes a generic but identical copy of itself into RNA, which can travel unharmed throughout the cell. Once copied, RNA travels though the cell to places like your ribosomes, and tells them how to put together amino acids in order to make proteins, the building blocks of your cell.
Inside the nucleus, DNA contains the genetic code for producing proteins. Messenger RNA copies the code inside the nucleus, and moves out of the nucleus to the ribosomes where the proteins are assembled according to the code on the mRNA.
DNA contains the instructions to make proteins, and ribosomes are the cellular machinery that reads this information and synthesizes proteins accordingly. Ribosomes use the information encoded in DNA to assemble amino acids in the correct order, forming proteins that carry out various functions in the cell. Thus, DNA provides the genetic blueprint for protein synthesis, and ribosomes are the key players in translating this information into functional proteins.
The function of messenger RNA is to carry copies of the instructions for assembling amino acids into proteins to the rest of the cell or, more specifically, to the ribosomes.
The function of messenger RNA is to carry copies of the instructions for assembling amino acids into proteins to the rest of the cell or, more specifically, to the ribosomes.
Messenger RNA (mRNA) copies DNA's instructions in the nucleus.
During transcription, the messenger RNA (mRNA) is synthesized by copying the information found in a gene from DNA. The mRNA carries this genetic information from the nucleus to the ribosomes in the cytoplasm where it serves as a template for protein synthesis during translation.
Messenger RNA.
mRNA (messenger RNA) carries a copy of the DNA from the nucleus to the ribosomes.
messenger RNA is something that copies the coded message from DNA in the nucleus and carries the message into the cytoplasm.But transfer RNA is something that the cytoplasm carries an amino acid to the ribosome and adds it to the growing protein chain.
They are copies of DNA, containing a genetic code which are basically instructions for creating proteins
mRNA carries the code that was transcribed from DNA out to the ribosome to form the correct amino acid chain. So, yes, in a way mRNA is a messenger to the ribosomes since DNA cannot leave the nucleus.
it copies a code from the DNA
copies the genetic code from the DNA molecule and carries it to the ribosome
DNA contains the instructions for protein production in the form of genes. During protein production, DNA is transcribed into messenger RNA (mRNA) which is then translated into proteins. The sequence of nucleotides in DNA determines the sequence of amino acids in a protein.