DNA, Transcription, and Translation
PS t&t
Summary
Lesson Summary
CK-12 Foundation, Biology. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/
- Transcription is the DNA ? RNA part of the central dogma of molecular biology. It occurs in the nucleus. During transcription, a copy of mRNA is made that is complementary to a strand of DNA. In eukaryotes, mRNA may be modified before it leaves the nucleus.
- The genetic code consists of the sequence of bases in DNA or RNA. Groups of three bases form codons, and each codon stands for one amino acid (or start or stop). The codons are read in sequence following the start codon until a stop codon is reached. The genetic code is universal, unambiguous, and redundant.
- Translation is the RNA ? protein part of the central dogma. It occurs at a ribosome. During translation, a protein is synthesized using the codons in mRNA as a guide. All three types of RNA play a role in translation.
CK-12 Foundation, Biology. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/