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4/16: Translation

4/16: Translation

Assessment

Presentation

Science

10th - 11th Grade

Medium

NGSS
HS-LS1-1

Standards-aligned

Created by

Rose Marsh

Used 12+ times

FREE Resource

19 Slides • 11 Questions

1

4/16: Translation

Last lesson was on making RNA from DNA is called transcription.

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2

Review Proteins

  • Proteins are polymers of amino acids. 

  • A string of amino acids is called a polypeptide.

  • The amino acids are held together by polypeptide bonds.

  • Amino acids are represented by three letter codes: Asn stands for asparagine. Gly stands for glycine.

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3

Proteins

  • All proteins are composed of various combinations of the 20 amino acids found in nature

  • Protein’s shape depends on its sequence of amino acids, it’s essential that the cell be able to translate the information in RNA into the sequence of amino acids that defines a protein’s form and function.

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4

Multiple Choice

What type of bonds are forming during translation?
1
Peptide bonds
2
Hydrogen bonds
3
Acid bonds

5

Multiple Choice

Translation takes place in the 
1
ribosome
2
chloroplast
3
nucleus
4
mitochondria

6

The Question?

How can a message written in RNA, which consists of only four bases (AUCG), specify all twenty amino acids?


7

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9

Coding

  • Let’s think about what you just did.

  • The two-word answer is written in our 26 letter English alphabet. But the answer was encoded using just four letters: A, U, C, and G. The way that four letters were able to represent our 26-letter alphabet was to have 3-letter combinations of A, U, C and G code for one letter of our alphabet. 

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10

mRNA

  • Cells use this same coding system to translate messenger RNA nucleotide sequences into the amino acid sequences of proteins.

  • Three mRNA nucleotides are called a codon. Codon means “codes one.”  (one amino acid)

  • In the example above, the first codon is AUG, and it codes for the amino acid methionine (Met) and so on.

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11

rRNA are general-purpose protein factories

  • Ribosomes are protein factories capable of reading mRNA instructions

  • The ribosome is made of two subunits which attach during the process of protein synthesis, then detach after the process is finished.


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12

tRNA

  • Transfer RNAs (tRNAs) bring amino acids to the ribosome.

  • On the bottom of the tRNA is an anti-codon: 3 RNA nucleotides that complement the codons in RNA

  • The top of the tRNA has an amino acid binding site.

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13

Overview of translation

  • During translation, ribosomes “read” the mRNA, translating the sequence of codons in the mRNA into a sequence of amino acids in a protein.

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14

Translation

  • The ribosome (rRNA) is wrapped around the mRNA to exposes the mRNA codons to the cytoplasm. The tRNA in the “A” site has just entered the ribosome. 

  • The tRNA in the “P” site is holding on to the growing polypeptide.

  • The “E” site is the exit site. After a tRNA has “donated” its amino acid to the growing polypeptide, it moves to the E site, and then leaves the ribosome.

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15

Using a Genetic Code Dictionary

  • Genetic code dictionaries let you translate sequences of RNA into sequences of amino acids

  • if you’re given a sequence of mRNA, you can use a genetic code dictionary to figure out what amino acid sequence that mRNA is coding for.

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16

Using a Genetic Code Dictionary

  • AUGGUCAAGGUUCUCGAUGCAGUCGU

  • The first step is to find the start codonAUG. In cells, AUG signals to ribosomes (the cell’s protein factories) where to start translating mRNA into protein.

  • Next, divide the mRNA into codons (groups of three RNA nucleotides). 

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17

Using a Genetic Code Dictionary

  • mRNA AUG GUC AAG GUU CUC GAU GCA GUC CGU

  • The next step is to look up each codon in a Genetic Code dictionary. 

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18

GUC

  • The inner ring (yellow) represents the first nucleotide in a codon.

  • The second ring (light orange) represents the second nucleotide

  • The third ring (orange/red) represents the third nucleotide

  • The fourth ring (light blue) tells you the amino acid

  • The last ring (green) gives you the three-letter abbreviation for the amino acid.

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19

20

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21

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22

Multiple Choice

Which structure reads the mRNA codons?
1
Nucleus
2
Ribosome
3
Golgi Body
4
Enzyme

23

Multiple Choice

What is the term for a three-nucleotide sequence that codes for an amino acid?
1
base
2
codon
3
amine
4
serine

24

Multiple Choice

The codon is located on the 
1
DNA
2
mRNA
3
tRNA
4
rRNA

25

Multiple Choice

What would happen if we did not have start codons?
1
Polypeptide chains would continue to grow
2
Amino acids would bind to tRNA
3
Protein synthesis wouldn't occur
4
mRNA would form a double strand

26

Multiple Choice

What type of molecule is the end product of translation?
1
Glucose
Glucose
2
Fatty Acid
3
Glycogen
4
Protein

27

Multiple Choice

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Which amino acid is made from the RNA codon UUA?
1
Phenylalanine
2
Leucine
3
Serine
4
Tyrosine

28

Multiple Choice

Brings the amino acids to the ribosome
1
mRNA
2
tRNA
3
rRNA
4
DNA

29

Multiple Choice

What would be the tRNA anticodon for the mRNA codon CAG?
1
GTC
2
GUC
3
CUG
4
CAG

30

Multiple Choice

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tRNA molecules match the mRNA codons with a(n):
1
Codon
2
Anti-Codon
3
Intron
4
Methylated Cap

4/16: Translation

Last lesson was on making RNA from DNA is called transcription.

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