COMPLETE EXAM 2024-2025
30S + 50S - ANSWER What are the 2 subunits of 70S ribosomes?
40S + 60S - ANSWER What are the 2 subunits of 80S ribosomes?
The small subunits (30S/40S) decode the mRNA; the large subunits
(50S/60S) catalyze the peptide bond formation of the amino acids -
ANSWER What are the main functions of the 2 subunits of 70S and
80S ribosomes?
rRNA (it base pairs with itself forming the shape of the ribosome) -
ANSWER Which part of the ribosome (rRNA or proteins) determines
its shape?
rRNA (no proteins are found within 18 angstroms of the active site ->
rRNA is what directly catalyzes peptide bond formation) - ANSWER
Which part of the ribosome (rRNA or proteins) contains the peptidyl
transferase activity?
Proteins (EF-Tu hydrolyzes GTP) - ANSWER Which part of the
ribosome (rRNA or proteins) contains the GTP hydrolysis activity?
The small subunit (30S, 40S) - ANSWER Which subunit is the tRNA's
anticodon located in?
The large subunit (50S, 60S) - ANSWER Which subunit is the tRNA's
acceptor stem located in?
It helps tRNA enter the ribosome - ANSWER What is the function of
EF-Tu?
Peptide bond - ANSWER What type of bond joins amino acids during
protein synthesis?
CCA - ANSWER What is the nucleotide sequence found at the 3' end
,of all tRNAs?
Adenosine (A) - ANSWER Which nucleotide on the tRNA is the target
for "charging" with an amino acid?
32 - ANSWER What is the minimum number of tRNAs for bacterial
systems?
45 - ANSWER What is the minimum number of tRNAs for eukaryotic
systems?
The carboxyl group (COOH) and the amino group (NH2) - ANSWER In
a peptide bond, what functional groups of the 2 amino acids are
involved in the bonding?
It recognizes the correct tRNA based on its configuration (binding
domains) and its anticodon - ANSWER How does the aminoacyl-tRNA
synthetase recognize which tRNA gets its amino acid?
An amino acid bound to a tRNA - ANSWER What is aminoacyl-tRNA?
(1) The amino acid is attached to AMP (from ATP breakdown),
forming aminoacyl-AMP -> (2) The amino acid detaches from AMP
and binds to the 3' -OH group on the terminal A of the tRNA, forming
aminoacyl-tRNA - ANSWER What is the 2-step process for "charging"
the tRNA?
The amino acid (its carboxyl group) binds to the 3' -OH group on the
terminal A of the tRNA - ANSWER Where does the amino acid get
added to the tRNA (specify RNA end and position of binding)?
There can be a slight deviation in the 3rd nucleotide of the codon,
allowing a tRNA molecule to pair with multiple codons - ANSWER
What is the wobble hypothesis?
False (it is at the 5' end because it connects with the 3' end of
mRNA's 3rd positioned nucleotide in its codon) - ANSWER T/F: the
"wobble" nucleotide is at the 3' end of tRNA's anticodon.
False (there are slight deviations in the genetic code in some
,eukaryotic mitochondria and bacteria) - ANSWER T/F: the genetic
code is strictly universal.
One tRNA can pair with multiple codons through non-Watson/Crick
base pairing (G=U) - ANSWER What is the significance of the wobble
hypothesis?
True (AMP derived from ATP is used to catalyze bond formation
between the amino acid and the tRNA) - ANSWER T/F: aminoacylation
of tRNAs requires ATP.
True (GTP is required for the binding of aminoacyl-tRNA to the A site
of the ribosome) - ANSWER T/F: protein synthesis requires GTP.
False (one aminoacyl-tRNA can pair with multiple codons, but one
codon cannot pair with multiple tRNAs) - ANSWER T/F: wobble allows
different aminoacyl-tRNAs to pair with same codon.
False (the bond formation between the amino acids and tRNAs is
catalyzed by aminoacyl-tRNA SYNTHETASE) - ANSWER T/F: ligase
enzyme joins the amino acids to the respective tRNAs.
False (it requires ATP) - ANSWER T/F: aminoacylation of tRNAs
requires GTP.
False (fmet-tRNA is in prokaryotes; met-tRNA is in eukaryotes) -
ANSWER T/F: fmet-tRNA is the initiator tRNA in eukaryotes.
Prokaryotes: a ribosome binding site in front of the operon;
eukaryotes: the 5' cap - ANSWER Where does the ribosome bind to
the mRNA in prokaryotes vs. eukaryotes?
True (but multiple proteins can be produced from a singular mRNA in
prokaryotes) - ANSWER T/F: there is generally only 1 protein
produced per mRNA in eukaryotes.
ATP - ANSWER What is required in order for the mRNA to be
"unwound" during translation in eukaryotes?
False (it only regulates translation in eukaryotes) - ANSWER T/F:
, phosphorylation regulates translation in both prokaryotes and
eukaryotes.
It binds to the A site in the 30S ribosome, preventing fmet-tRNA from
binding - ANSWER What is the function of IF1?
It binds fmet-tRNA and GTP, bringing the complex to the P site for
GTP hydrolysis - ANSWER What is the function of IF2?
IF2 - ANSWER Which IF is able to bind GTP (in bacteria)?
It keeps the 30S and 50S subunits separate - ANSWER What is the
function of IF3?
The 30S subunit - ANSWER Which ribosomal subunit binds to the
ribosomal binding site (rbs) in prokaryotes?
After (the 50S subunit must also be present for GTP hydrolysis to
occur) - ANSWER Does GTP hydrolysis occur BEFORE or AFTER the
70S subunit is formed?
(1) IF3 dissociates from the 30S subunit -> (2) the 50S subunit binds
forming the 70S complex -> (3) GTP hydrolysis occurs, releasing IF2
and allowing polypeptide formation to begin - ANSWER What are the
3 steps in formation of the 70S complex?
To release IF2 from the complex, allowing formation of the
polypeptide chain - ANSWER What is the function of GTP hydrolysis
in the formation of the 70S complex?
Segments of mRNA in front of operons (in prokaryotes) that specific
sections of rRNA complementary base pair to - ANSWER What are
ribosomal binding sites (rbs)?
The amino group does a nucleophilic attack on the adjacent amino
acid's carboxyl group - ANSWER During peptide bond formation,
which functional group attacks which? Which type of "attack"
occurs?
(1) The aminoacyl-tRNA binds to the A site by matching its anticodon