The process of producing a protein product from a messenger RNA (mRNA) is called transcription. This occurs in the cytoplasm of a cell, and typically at the rough ER.
mRNA (messenger RNA) is synthesized in the nucleus and carries information from DNA for producing proteins.
The code for the synthesis of proteins is contained in the DNA molecule. Genes, which are specific sequences of DNA, provide the instructions for making proteins through the process of transcription and translation. During transcription, messenger RNA (mRNA) is synthesized from a gene. Then, during translation, the mRNA is used as a template to assemble a specific protein.
The type of biological molecule that contains the information needed to synthesize a living organism's proteins is deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). DNA holds the genetic blueprint in the form of sequences of nucleotides, which are transcribed into messenger RNA (mRNA). The mRNA is then translated into proteins by ribosomes, using the information encoded in the DNA.
Proteins. The sequence of nucleotide bases in DNA codes for the sequence of amino acids in proteins, which ultimately determines their structure and function. This process is known as protein synthesis.
Messenger RNA, mRNA. The DNA information is encoded into mRNA in the nucleus by translation and this message leaves the nucleus to dock with a ribosomal subunit to synthesize proteins.
DNA contains the information on how to make proteins. This information is stored in the form of genes, which are sequences of nucleotides within the DNA molecule. Genes are transcribed into messenger RNA (mRNA), which is then translated into proteins by ribosomes.
mRNA (messenger RNA) is synthesized in the nucleus and carries information from DNA for producing proteins.
The molecule that contains the information a cell needs to make proteins is called messenger RNA (mRNA). It carries the genetic instructions from the DNA in the cell's nucleus to the ribosomes where protein synthesis occurs.
The code for the synthesis of proteins is contained in the DNA molecule. Genes, which are specific sequences of DNA, provide the instructions for making proteins through the process of transcription and translation. During transcription, messenger RNA (mRNA) is synthesized from a gene. Then, during translation, the mRNA is used as a template to assemble a specific protein.
The type of biological molecule that contains the information needed to synthesize a living organism's proteins is deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). DNA holds the genetic blueprint in the form of sequences of nucleotides, which are transcribed into messenger RNA (mRNA). The mRNA is then translated into proteins by ribosomes, using the information encoded in the DNA.
Following the "life central dogma" of Biology, the genes codifies to a messenger molecule that carries the "information" that is going to be "translated" into proteins. In biochemical words: The genes, in the doble-helix molecule of DNA, are transcribed into a single-strand molecule of messenger RNA, or mRNA (the transcription process) that is translated into a sequence of amino acids to form a polypeptide chain in the process called protein synthesis or translation.
The DNA molecule is the cell's instructions. It is the information contained in this molecule that determines what proteins the cell makes, and we are thinking that a certain part of the molecule called telomeres may even tell the cell how long to live.
Messenger RNAMessenger RNA
Dna
Proteins. The sequence of nucleotide bases in DNA codes for the sequence of amino acids in proteins, which ultimately determines their structure and function. This process is known as protein synthesis.
Messenger RNA, mRNA. The DNA information is encoded into mRNA in the nucleus by translation and this message leaves the nucleus to dock with a ribosomal subunit to synthesize proteins.
Messenger RNA