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Genetic Code

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Protein synthesis involves five stages: activation of amino acids, initiation, elongation, termination, and post-translational processing. The genetic code is universal, consisting of triplet codons that specify amino acids, with redundancy allowing for mutation resistance. Signal sequences direct proteins to their cellular destinations, and degradation mechanisms recycle amino acids and regulate protein levels.

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Chapter 27 - Genetic Code
Three Major advances in Understanding Protein
synthesis
1. Proteins synthesized at ribosomes

2. Amino acids activated for synthesis by attachment to tRNA via aminoacyl-tRNA
synthetases

3. tRNA acts as an “adapter” to translate mRNA into protein




Adapter (tRNA) brings amino acids to mRNA
tRNA: adaptor that translates nucleotide sequence into amino acid sequence



Chapter 27 1

, Amino acid is covalently bound at the 3’ end of the tRNA

A specific nucleotide triplet (anticodon) interacts with a triplet codon in mRNA
by hydrogen bonding of complementary bases


The Genetic Code
There are 20 common, genetically encoded amino acids

There are 4 different nucleotide bases in the genetic code

A four letter code in groups of 2 per codon

4^2= 16 combinations (to few)

A four letter code in groups of 3 per codon

4^3 = 64 combinations (sufficient)

mRNA code is written in 5’-3’ direction


The 5 rules of the genetic code
1. Triplet code:

A codon of 3 nucleotides specifies the amino acid inserted within protein

2. Non-overlapping code:

Specific first codon sets a reading frame, no nucleotides shared by codons

3. Commaless code:

The reading frame contains no punctuation, sequence is contiguous.

4. Degenerate code:

There are 4^3 = 64 codons

1 Initiation codon (AUG)

3 Termination codons (UAA, UAG, UGA)

4 more than one codon may exist for an amino acid

5. Universal code:

All organisms use the same code (nearly, mitochondria are exceptions)


Triplet Code & Nonoverlapping Code


Chapter 27 2

, A codon is a triplet of nucleotides that codes for a specific amino acid

In translation triplet code are read in a successive nonoverlapping fashion

The first codon establishes reading frame




Nonoverlapping Code & Commaless Code
The amino acid sequence of a protein defined by a linear sequence of
contiguous triplets

If reading frame is thrown off by 1 or 2 bases, all subsequent codons are out of
order

Shown by effects of deletions and insertions




Chapter 27 3

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