Protein Synthesis: mRNA Codon, tRNA Anticodon & DNA Codon

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During transcription, mRNA is synthesized from the DNA template, specifically the antisense strand, resulting in mRNA that is complementary to this strand and identical to the sense strand, except for the substitution of uracil for thymine. The codon on mRNA, such as AUG for methionine, corresponds to the anticodon on tRNA, which is UAC, while the original DNA codon would be TAC. The genetic code is described as degenerate because multiple codons can code for the same amino acid, allowing for silent mutations that do not affect protein synthesis. Additionally, mutations in tRNA can sometimes compensate for mutations in the corresponding gene, maintaining the correct amino acid sequence despite changes in the genetic code. Understanding these relationships is crucial for grasping the complexities of protein synthesis and genetic mutations.
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In transcription, the mRNA, with the help of RNA polymerase, creates a code complementary to the sense strand on the DNA (i think). So does that mean that the mRNA's codon is opposite of the actual codon that codes for a protein? This would mean that the anticodon on the tRNA and the codon on the initial DNA would be the same. So, for example, for the amino acid methiomine, would the codon "sequence" be AUG (which is on the mRNA), or UAC (which is on the DNA and tRNA)?
 
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student007 said:
In transcription, the mRNA, with the help of RNA polymerase, creates a code complementary to the sense strand on the DNA (i think).

Some correction. During transcription, RNA polymerase creates mRNA that is complementatry to anti-sense (the non coding strand) DNA strand. So the mRNA is the same as the sense DNA strand.

student007 said:
So does that mean that the mRNA's codon is opposite of the actual codon that codes for a protein? This would mean that the anticodon on the tRNA and the codon on the initial DNA would be the same. So, for example, for the amino acid methiomine, would the codon "sequence" be AUG (which is on the mRNA), or UAC (which is on the DNA and tRNA)?

Yes you are right in term of your logic.
 
Nay

iansmith said:
Some correction. During transcription, RNA polymerase creates mRNA that is complementatry to anti-sense (the non coding strand) DNA strand. So the mRNA is the same as the sense DNA strand.



Yes you are right in term of your logic.

NO. DNA does not contain the base Uracil. It contains Thymine instead. So it would be:

Original DNA: TAC
mRNA Strand: AUG
tRNA Strand: UAC

DNA would not be the exact same as tRNA. It would be the same except for the Thymine/Uracil difference.

DNA is not the same as mRNA. mRNA is complimentary to DNA, that is correct. But it will have a Uracil anywhere there was a Thymine in the DNA that the mRNA was coded from.
 
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TheLoneWolf said:
NO. DNA does not contain the base Uracil. It contains Thymine instead. So it would be:

Original DNA: TAC
mRNA Strand: AUG
tRNA Strand: UAC

DNA would not be the exact same as tRNA. It would be the same except for the Thymine/Uracil difference.

DNA is not the same as mRNA. mRNA is complimentary to DNA, that is correct. But it will have a Uracil anywhere there was a Thymine in the DNA that the mRNA was coded from.

i think that when he said "the same" iansmith already assumed the U/T difference.
 
The tRNA gets a little more interesting because its tertiary (3 dimensional structure) allows a tRNA charged with an amino acid (tRNA-aa) to bind to more than one codon on the mRNA because of a thing called "wobble" pairing. This position corresponds to the 3rd codon position on the mRNA (5' to 3') and the 1st position of the tRNA (5' to 3'). This means that a single charged tRNA can bind to more than one codon.
3' UAC 5'
5' AUG 3'
 
quetzalcoatl9 said:
i think that when he said "the same" iansmith already assumed the U/T difference.

Was clarifying, since he said "UAC (which is on the DNA" made me wonder if he knew.
 
quasi426 said:
The tRNA gets a little more interesting because its tertiary (3 dimensional structure) allows a tRNA charged with an amino acid (tRNA-aa) to bind to more than one codon on the mRNA because of a thing called "wobble" pairing. This position corresponds to the 3rd codon position on the mRNA (5' to 3') and the 1st position of the tRNA (5' to 3'). This means that a single charged tRNA can bind to more than one codon.
3' UAC 5'
5' AUG 3'

yes, and this is why the genetic code is said to be degenerate.

it is also interesting that single mutations in a gene can be overshadowed by mutations in a corresponding tRNA to set everything back again!
 
quetzalcoatl9 said:
yes, and this is why the genetic code is said to be degenerate.

it is also interesting that single mutations in a gene can be overshadowed by mutations in a corresponding tRNA to set everything back again!

Or you don't even need a mutation in a corresponding tRNA. I can't think of an example off the top of my head, but if you have a silent point mutation in mRNA, some codons code for the same amino acid. There's about 60 codons and 20 amino acids I believe. So you have doubles, even triples.

EDIT: Just did a google search, and here's an example:

UUU (Phe/F)Phenylalanine
UUC (Phe/F)Phenylalanine

Both code for Phe, so if you had a UUU have a silent mutation to UUC, it wouldn't matter.

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genetic_code
 
TheLoneWolf said:
Or you don't even need a mutation in a corresponding tRNA. I can't think of an example off the top of my head, but if you have a silent point mutation in mRNA, some codons code for the same amino acid. There's about 60 codons and 20 amino acids I believe. So you have doubles, even triples.

EDIT: Just did a google search, and here's an example:

UUU (Phe/F)Phenylalanine
UUC (Phe/F)Phenylalanine

Both code for Phe, so if you had a UUU have a silent mutation to UUC, it wouldn't matter.

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genetic_code

you misunderstand me. there are single mutations that would matter.

let's say that you have a mutation in a gene that winds up substituting Ser instead of Leu(TTG->TCG). it has been observed that frequently this will be accompanied by a mutation in the sequence of DNA that makes the tRNA for Leu to match the new mutated anticodon for Ser, thus undoing the mutation.
 
  • #10
quetzalcoatl9 said:
you misunderstand me. there are single mutations that would matter.

let's say that you have a mutation in a gene that winds up substituting Ser instead of Leu(TTG->TCG). it has been observed that frequently this will be accompanied by a mutation in the sequence of DNA that makes the tRNA for Leu to match the new mutated anticodon for Ser, thus undoing the mutation.

Oh I see what you are saying. But then it's still technically a mutation, and it screws up the amino acid sequence, because you have a different amino acid than originally intended, hence, a different protein.
 
  • #11
TheLoneWolf said:
Oh I see what you are saying. But then it's still technically a mutation, and it screws up the amino acid sequence, because you have a different amino acid than originally intended, hence, a different protein.

no, there isn't since the mutation in the tRNA will exactly undo the mutation in the gene.

however, you are right in that it is still a mutation since the genetic sequence has been changed - but not the amino acid sequence.
 
  • #12
quetzalcoatl9 said:
no, there isn't since the mutation in the tRNA will exactly undo the mutation in the gene.

however, you are right in that it is still a mutation since the genetic sequence has been changed - but not the amino acid sequence.

You said previously that Leu would be replaced with Ser. That would be a change in the amino acid sequence and the genetic sequence. That's called a mutation.
 
  • #13
TheLoneWolf said:
You said previously that Leu would be replaced with Ser. That would be a change in the amino acid sequence and the genetic sequence. That's called a mutation.

yes, you are right, but in the case that i gave the tRNA would also undergo a mutation so that everything would be set right (so even though the mRNA codon specifies a Ser, the anticodon region of a Leu tRNA would be mutated to be complementary to a Ser codon). so in the end, the correct amino acid is added to the peptide even though the genetic sequence has been changed.

i forget what this particular process is called, but it does occur in life.
 
  • #14
quetzalcoatl9 said:
yes, you are right, but in the case that i gave the tRNA would also undergo a mutation so that everything would be set right (so even though the mRNA codon specifies a Ser, the anticodon region of a Leu tRNA would be mutated to be complementary to a Ser codon). so in the end, the correct amino acid is added to the peptide even though the genetic sequence has been changed.

i forget what this particular process is called, but it does occur in life.

But the amino acid still ends up being different fron what it originally was supposed to be, hence MUTATION. A mutation is a change in genes and/or chromosomes, etc. It would be considered a point mutation, even though the tRNA mutates to match the mRNA. At least, according to the Biology course I learned this year.
 
  • #15
TheLoneWolf said:
But the amino acid still ends up being different fron what it originally was supposed to be, hence MUTATION. A mutation is a change in genes and/or chromosomes, etc. It would be considered a point mutation, even though the tRNA mutates to match the mRNA. At least, according to the Biology course I learned this year.

maybe we are miscommunicating...the amino acid that gets put on the peptide does NOT change. the original sequence specified a Leu, the genetic mutation in the DNA changed it to make a Ser, but before the peptide is actually made a tRNA is mutated to make a Leu. Therefore, the peptide is exactly what it was supposed to be.
 
  • #16
here is a link that kind-of describes what I'm talking about:

http://www.molbio.uoregon.edu/psaks/trnachng.html
 
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  • #17
O_O We never learned that when we were learning protein synthesis.
 
  • #18
Sorry, but back 2 my initial thing. So, to be clear on it:

The sense strand on the DNA is what actually codes for amino acids, the mRNA uses the antisense strand as a template so that it can get a similar coding scheme as the sense strand, and the anticodon on the tRNA has a sequence that is opposite of both the sense strand on the DNA and on the mRNA, right?
 
  • #19
student007 said:
Sorry, but back 2 my initial thing. So, to be clear on it:

The sense strand on the DNA is what actually codes for amino acids, the mRNA uses the antisense strand as a template so that it can get a similar coding scheme as the sense strand, and the anticodon on the tRNA has a sequence that is opposite of both the sense strand on the DNA and on the mRNA, right?

Yes, and as TheLoneWolf pointed out, just remember the difference between DNA and RNA.
 
  • #20
My teacher taught us to call it "tag-c" and that way we'd remember T binds to A and G binds to C.
 
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