Proved by
Requires
Start from
Model
lead to
Connects- Daniel
Held by - Daniel
example
Influenced by - Daniel
Function as - Daniel
Controlled at
bind
convert
bind
controlled at
Connects- Daniel
Protein structure can affect mutations
Affected by- Daniel
Both complex processes
bind
Composed of - Daniel
Connects- Daniel
Central dogma - Daniel
Both complex processes in cells
Wrap around
coupled transport
Activate/repress- Daniel
Structures in photosynthesis
bind
Central dogma - Daniel
Result in

Chemical Bonds-Daniel

Ionic Bond

r

Transfer of electrons between oppositely charged ironsCan lead to ion-dipole interactions in water

Ion-dipole interactions in water

Covalent Bond

r

Two atoms share one or more pairs of electrons to achieve stability.

Structure and Function of Cells- Cambry

Prokaryotic Cells

Archaea

Circular chromosome

r

stores genetic information 

Cytoplasm

r

gel like substance that fills the cell and and keeps the organelles in place

Bacteria

Plama Membrane

r

selectively permeable barrier, mechanical boundary of cell, nutrient and waste transport, location of many metabolic processes (respiration and photosynthesis), detection of environmental cues for chemotaxis

Gas Vacuole

r

buoyancy for floating in aquatic environments

Ribosomes

r

protein synthesis

Inclusion bodies

r

storage of carbon, phosphate, and other substances 

Nucleoid

r

localization of genetic material (DNA)

Periplasmic Space

r

contains hydrolytic enzymes and binding proteins to nutrient processing and uptake

Cell wall

r

Gives bacteria shape and protection from lysis in dilute solutions

Capsules

r

resistance to phagocytosis

- slime layers

r

adherence to surfaces 

Fimbriae

r

 attachment to surfaces

Pili

r

bacterial mating 

Flagella

r

movement

Endospore

r

survival under harsh environmental conditions  

Eukaryotic Cells

Animal

proteoglycan

r

found in the ECM, proteoglycan are  proteins with sugars attached, involved in organizing extracellular matrix

Extracellular matrix

r

located outside the membrane, this  structure has many parts: fibronectin, proteoglycan (animal cell ECM), and collagen. Changes in this structure can trigger processes inside the cell

Desmosomes

r

 structure connects cells together that are semi-sealed. Desmosomes use proteins and are programed to selectively allow materials

Tight junctions

r

secure cells very tightly, keeps stuff from freely moving around 

Gap junctions

r

structures that connect cells, things can pass through very easily

Plants

Cell wall

r

 located outside the cell membrane, made of cellulose, and helps maintain cell shape

Chloroplast

r

double membrane organelle that has its own DNA and performs photosynthesis

Central Vacuole

r

stores water, nutrients, and waste  

Plasmodesmata

r

channels  found in plant cells that allow for the movement of water and other materials to move between cells

Plastids

r

 store food and make pigment 

Both

Nuclear Envelope

r

double membrane enclosing the nucleus; performed by pores; continuous with ER, also known as the nuclear lamina 

Nucleolus

r

non membranous structure involved in production of ribosomes; a nucleus has one or more nucleoli 

Chromatin

r

 material consisting of DNA and protein; visible in a dividing cell as individual condensed chromosomes 

Plasma membrane

r

 membrane enclosing the cell

Ribosomes

r

complexes that make proteins; free in cytosol or bound to rough ER or nuclear envelope 

Golgi apparatus

r

organelle active in synthesis, modification, sorting, and secretion/transportation of cell products

Lysosomes

r

digestive organelle where biomolecules are broken down, hydrolysis reaction 

Mitochondria

r

 organelle where cellular respiration occurs and most ATP is generated 

Peroxisome

r

organelle with various specialized metabolic functions; produces hydrogen peroxide as a by product and then converts it to water  

Microvilli

r

projections that increase the cells surface area 

Cytoskeleton

r

reinforces cell shape; functions in cell movement; components are made of protein, includes…

Microfilaments

r

made of actin, helps maintain cell shape but also aid with movement 

Intermediate filament

r

in the middle, anchor organelles to the cell and help maintain a cell’s shape, composed of keratin proteins.

Microtubules

r

made of tubulin, this hollow shape maintains the shape of the cell. very structural and moves organelles 

Rough ER

r

composed of ribosomes that perform protein synthesis

Smooth ER

r

attached to nucleus synthesizes lipids (can also help detoxify) 

Vesicles

r

Vehicle of the cell,  the golgi apparatus packages things into vesicles where vesicles can then transport cellular materials.

Cytoplasm

r

gel like substance that fills the cell and and keeps the organelles in place

Nonpolar

r

Sharing of electrons between two atoms with an EN difference of less than 0.5

Van Der Waals

Hydrophobic Interactions

Polar

r

Sharing of electrons between two atoms with an EN difference of 0.5 or greater

Examples in Biological Molecules

Peptide bond

Phosphodiester bond

Glycosylic linkage

Ester bond

GPCR Signaling Pathway

Partially Charged Atoms

Hydrogen Bond

Water Properties

Cohesive behavior

High Specific Heat

High Heat of Vaporization

Denser as liquid than solid

Universal Solvent

Dipole-dipole Interaction

Biological Molecules- Charlotte

Nucleic acids

RNA

r

Unlike DNA, RNA has oxygen

G/C and A/U

DNA

r

DNA provides directions for its own replicationDNA directs the synthesis of messenger RNA (mRNA), and through mRNA, DNA can control protein synthesis, this process is known as gene expressionDNA is double helix polymerDeoxyribose (DNA)--> no oxygen

G/C and A/T

H-bonding through complitary base pairing forms DNA double helix

Nucleotides

r

Nucleic acids are polymers made of monomers-- called nucleotides

Nitrogenous base

phosphate group

Phosphodiester link connects phosphites and sugars

5 carbon sugar

Lipids

r

NOTE: LIPIDS ARE NOT POLYMERS!A process of dehydration occurs to make a fat molecule.Heating can change the chemical composition of an oil/fat. Repeated heating and cooling cycles can denature and change the composition of double bonds. However, only a fraction of fats are effected though.

Saturated

solid at room temperature

"saturated with Hydrogen"

Hydrophobic

Unsaturated

Liquid at room temperature

Double bonded carbon

Trans fats

removing double C bond and adding Hydrogen to convert cis to trans fat, however this incomplete formation of unsaturated to saturated fat is what leads to trans fat.

Carbohydrates

r

Carbohydrates serve as fuel and building materials

Isomers

Geometric Isomers

Enantiomers

Structural Isomers

Types of polysaccharides

structure

cellulose

storage

glycogen

starch

Beta Glucose

Alpha Glucose

Protiens

R groups

Polar

Non-polar

Acidic

Basic

Protein folding

Primary

Secodary

Alpha Helices

Beta pleated sheets

Tertiary

Quarternary

Functional groups

Carbonyl group (>C=O)

Hydroxyl Group (-OH)

Carboxyl Group (-COOH)

Amino Group (-NH2)

Sulfhydryl Group (-SH)

Phosphate Group (-OPO3^2-)

Methyl Group (-CH3)

Cell Respiration - Cambry

r

Cellular respirations purpose if to make ATP Glucose is oxidized Oxygen is reduced Three total processes: glycolysis, pyruvate oxidation and critic acid cycle, and oxidative phosphorylation

Glycolysis

r

Occurs in the cytoplasm. Total output- 4 ATP, 2 NADH, 2 pyruvate Net output- 2 ATP, 2 NADH, 2 pyruvate

Energy Investment Phase

r

First five steps- require energy to prepare molecule for breakdown -2 ADP are formed

Step One

r

Starting molecule: glucoseEnzyme: hexokinaseProduct: glucose 6-phosphate

Step Three

r

Starting molecule: fructose 6-phosphate Enzyme: phosphofructokinaseProduct: fructose 1,6-biphosphate

Energy Payoff Phase

r

Last five steps- generate net gain by producing ATP that was invested -2 pyruvate, 2 NADH, and 4 ATP are formed

Pyruvate Oxidation and Citric Acid Cycle

Pyruvate Oxidation

r

-Pyruvate, from glycolysis, is oxidized to form Acetyl CoA-Oxygen is required

Citric Acid Cycle

r

Formed: ATP= 1NADH= 3FADH2= 1

Step One

r

Starting molecule: Acetyl CoAEnzyme: OxaloacetateProduct: Citrate

Step Three

r

Starting molecule: IsocitrateEnzyme: looses electrons --> NAD to NADH Product: ketoglutarate

Oxidative Phosphorylation

Electron Transport Chain (ETC)

r

Components: -Complex I, II, III, IV-Q-CytEnergy is released at each step-NADH --> complex I --> Q --> complex III- ->Cyt c--> complex IVProtons are getting pumped into inner membrane C6H12O6 is oxidized CO2 is reduced

Chemiosmosis

r

Protons go back through the ATP synthase, moving from a high concentration to low concentrationThe energy from the ATP synthase gives ADP energy to make ATP

Photosynthesis - Cambry

r

The goal of photosynthesis is to produce glucose (sugar) H2O is oxidized and CO2 is reduced

Stage 2: Calvin Cycle

r

Occurs in the stroma Produces sugar from CO2 with the help of NADPH and ATP produced by the light reactions -CO2 is initially incorporated into an organic molecule through a process called carbon fixation -ATP provides the necessary chemical energy, and NADPH provides electrons needed to reduce CO2 Input: -ATP+Pi-NADPH-CO2Output: -ADP+Pi-NADP+-CH2O

Phase 1

r

-CO2 is taken in through the stomata and added to Ribulose biphosphate to form Rubisco- an organic molecule -From Rubisco, 6 carbon intermediate are formed

CAM Plants

r

Photosynthetic adaption to arid conditions -CAM plants opened their stomata's at night and incorporate CO2 into organic acids -Stomata's close during the day and CO2 is released to form organic acids and used int he Calvin Cycle

Spatial separation of steps

r

Occurs in different cells

Temporal separation of steps

r

Same Cells

Stage 1: Light Reactions

r

Located in the thylakoid membrane Convert solar energy into chemical energy -H2O is split to provide electrons and protons (H+) -O2 is released as a waste product -The electron acceptor NADP+ is reduced to NADPH -ATP is generated by adding a phosphate group to ADP in a process called photophosphorylationInput:-Light -H2O -NADP+-ADP+PiOutput: -ATP -NADPH -Oxygen -H+

Cyclic Electron Flow

r

Only PS1 is used! Formed: -ATP Electrons are recycled back through Photosystem 1, where ATP is the only thing generated

Non-cyclic or Linear Flow of Electrons

r

H2O is oxidized Forms: -Oxygen -NADPH -ATP -Electrons move down a path-Water is first oxidized in photosytem II (PS II)-Electrons move down a transport chain to photosytem (PS I)-ATP is generated-NADP+ is reduced to NADPH

C4 Photosynthesis

r

Enhance CO2 uptake and reduces photorespiration to adapt to hot, arid climates

Long Distance

r

If the cell receiving the signal is far from the cell, and it has the receptor that receives the signal, then it is long distance signaling. One example is hormonal signaling.

Local

r

If cells release the ligands or signal molecules in close proximity to cells that have the receptor to receive the signals, then it is local signaling.

Paracrine

r

Send secretary vesicles to target cells

Synaptic

r

Send neurotransmitters

Cell Signaling - Daniel^

Receptor

r

Present in a target cell that receives a signal

Membrane Receptor

G-Proteins Coupled Receptor

r

Transmembrane protein with alpha helix domain. Once it is bound by signaling molecule, its shape is changed which allows it to bind to G protein.

G protein

r

When it is bound to GPCR, it changes shape and makes the bound GDP to be replaced with GTP. G protein with GTP bound is activated.

Adenylyl Cyclase

r

Active G protein can then activate Nearby enzyme, such as adenylyl cyclase.

ATP to CAMP

r

Activate adelylyl cyclase converts ATP to cAMP, which is a second messenger. Once cAMP started to activate the signal transduction cascade, it is converted to AMP by phosphodiesterase.

Protein Kinase A

r

cAMP binds and activates protein kinase A, which goes on to activate another kinase and so on.

Cellular responses

r

An example of cellular response occurs in the nucleus. Signaling pathways finally activate a transcription factor which binds DNA and turns on or off genes in the nucleus.

Ion Channel Receptor

r

Acts as a gate for ions. When a signal molecule binds a receptor, the receptor changes shape, allowing specific ions to go through.

Intracellular Receptor

r

Present in cytoplasm in nucleus.

Signaling Molecules

r

Molecules released by a cell which is received by another cell

Hydrophobic/nonpolar

Hydrophilic/Polar

Aldosterone Pathway

r

Aldosterone is a steroid hormone that is secreted by cells of the adrenal gland and enters cells all over the body. The hormone passes through the plasma membrane, binds the receptor protein in the cytoplasm, and activates it. The active receptor enters the nucleus and binds to specific genes, promoting transcription of genes.

Cell membranes-Charlotte

r

Biological Membrane: Cell membranes are selectively permeable barriers

Phospholipid Bilayer

r

Cell membranes are composed of a phospholipid bilayer. This phospholipid bilayer comprises an outer hydrophilic head and an inner hydrophobic tail.

Cholesterol in membranes

r

Helps phospholipid bilayer to maintain ideal consistency, rigid enough to have structure but fluid enough to move materials through the membrane.

Membrane Proteins

r

Transmembrane protiens are imbeded in the phospholipid bilayer with an extracellular facing side and a cytoplasmic facing side.Some functions of membrane proteins include:transportationenzymatic activitysignal transductioncell-cell recognitionintercellular joiningattachment to the cytoskeleton and ECM (extracellular matrix)

Membrane fluidity

r

The type of hydrocarbon tails present in the phospholipid (ie. saturated, unsaturated) affects the plasma membranes fluidity. Unsaturated hydrocarbons tails with kins leas to a fluid consistencySaturated hydrocarbon tails lead to a viscous stateEvery phospholipid has a specific phase transition temperature. When above ideal temperature the lipid becomes fluid in a liquid crystalline phase.When below this temperature the lipid is rigid and in a gel phase.

Selective Permeability

r

Highly permeable molecules (meaning molecules that are able to easily pass through the phospholipid bilayer) include small, nonpolar molecules. Large, uncharged, polar molecules have lower permeability and charged ions have the lowest permeability.Molecules that have low permeability typically need assistance from transport proteins to pass through the membrane.

Passive Transport

r

Passive transport is the diffusion of a substance across a membrane, going with the concentration gradient. In passive transport it's important to note that there is no energy investment.

Diffusion

r

Diffusion is the movement of molecules across a cell membrane from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration. This method of transportation requires no energy input from the cell.

Osmosis

r

Osmosis is the movement of water across a semi-permeable membrane from a region of low solute concentration (high water concentration) to a region of high solute concentration (low water concentration), which is done without the use of energy.Key terms related to Osmosis:Tonicity is the ability of a surrounding solution to cause a cell to gain or lose waterIsotonic solution: Solute concentration is the same as inside the cell; no net water movement across the plasma membraneHypertonic solution: Solute concentration is greater than that inside the cell; cell loses waterHypotonic solution: Solute concentration is less than that inside the cell; cell gains waterWater balance in plant cells:Hypotinic solution-- Turgid (normal)Isotonic solution-- FlaccidHypertonic solution-- Plasmolyzed

Facilitated Diffusion

r

Facilitated diffusion is a type of passive transport where molecules move across a cell membrane with the help of transmembrane proteins (channel or carrier proteins), down their concentration gradient, without the use of cellular energy.

Active Transport

r

Active Transport is the movement of substances from a low to high concentration. The most important element of active transport that separates it from passive transport is the use of cellular energy (ATP).Electrogenic pumps: a transport protein that generates voltage across a membrane, this is known as the membrane potentialCan also help store energy that can be used for cellular work

Sodium-Potassium Pump

Sodium-Potassium Pump

Contransport

r

Cotransport is the coupled transport by a membrane protein. This occurs when active transport of a solute indirectly drives the transport of other substances.

Ion Channels

r

There are two main types of ion channels:UNGATEDAlways openGATED: Open and close in response to stimuliStretch-gated – sense stretch – open when membrane is mechanically deformedLigand-gated – open and close when a neurotransmitter binds to channelVoltage-gated – open and close in response to changes in membranepotential

DNA Structure/Replication - Daniel^

Replication

Semi-conserved

r

Two strands of the parental DNA separate, and each functions as a template for synthesis of a new complementary strand.

Messleson and Stahl Experiment^

r

Three models were proposed: conservative, semi-conservative, and dispersive models. In the experiment, Messleson and Stahl grow bacteria in a growth medium that contains the heavy isotope of N15, and transferred the bacteria to medium containing N14. After the bacteria were grown for one round, DNA were extracted and centrifuge in CsCl gradients, there is only one intermediate density band showing. After bacterial were grown for two rounds of replication, there appeared two bands: one intermediate density, and one light density. The results supported the semi-conservative model.

ORI

r

ORI is the origin of DNA replication. DNA get separated here and form a bubble, which is called a replication bubble and there are two forks at each end of the bubble

Prokaryotes

r

Prokaryotic DNA is circular and there is only one ORI.

Eukaryotes

r

Long DNA molecules have multiple ORI and replication bubbles.

Proteins

Helicase

r

Unwids parental double helix at replication forks

Single-strand binding protein^

r

Binds and stabilizes single-stranded DNA

Topoisomerase

r

Relieves the strain caused by DNA unwinding

Primase

r

Synthesizes RNA primers using parental DNA as a template

DNA Polymerase III

r

Using parental DNA as a template, adds nucleotides only to the 3' end of DNA strand

DNA Polymerase I

r

Removes RNA nucleotides of primer from 5'end and replaces them with DNA nucleotides

Ligase

r

Joins 3' end of DNA of leading strand and joins Okazaki fragments of lagging strand

Bidirectional

r

ORI is in the middle of the replication bubble. The two forks at each end of the bubble move in opposite direction, so DNA replication is bidirectional.

Leading Strand

r

Nucleotides are added continuously in the direction of the fork

Lagging Strand

r

Nucleotides are added in short segments called Okazaki fragments, in the opposite direction of the fork

Genetic Material

Griffith Experiment

r

Fredrick Griffith studies Streptococcus pneumoniae. He used two strains of the bacteria, the pathogenic S strain and the nonpathogenic R strain. He found that the living S cells kill mouse, while injecting living R cells or heat-killed S cells, mouse are healthy. However, when combining heat-killed S cells and living R cells, he found that the R cells are converted into S cells and kill the mouse. This experiment shows that some genetic traits can be transferred from S to R strain.

Hershey and Chase Experiment

r

Bacteriophage is only made of two components: DNA and proteins. Hershey and Chase labeled the DNA with P32, and proteins of bacteriophage with S35. The bacteriophage and bacteria were mixed in a tube, and centrifuged the mixture. The bacteria cells form a pellet at bottom and free phages (lighter) remain at the supernatant. They found that only P32 is detected in pellet , indicating that it was the DNA injected inside bacteria and not protein. DNA is the genetic material.

Double Helix

Chargaff'rule

r

The amount of Adenine equals the amount of Thymine. The amount of Guanine equals the amount of Cytosine.

Base pairing

r

A is paired with T, G is paired with C

Eukaryotic gene -expression - Daniel

Chromosomes

r

One way to control gene expression is to keep the chromosomes compacted so the genes are not accessible to enzymes and proteins for transcription.

H1 Histone

Nucleosome

Histone Octamer

r

2 copies of histone proteins each: H2A, H2B, H3, H4.

DNA

Transcription

Regulation

Proximal control elements

Distal control elements (enhancers)^

r

Activator proteins bind to enhancers in DNA. A DNA-bending protein brings the bound activators closer to the promoter, further recruiting general TFs and mediator protein to form transcription initiation complex on the promoter.

Transcription factors

General

r

Bring low level of transcription (background)

Specific

r

Increase (activators) or decrease (repressors) level of transcription

Multiple steps

RNA processing

Transport to cytoplasm

Chromatin modification^

Translation

Protein processing

Prokaryotic gene expression - Daniel

Transcription

The Lac Operon

Structural genes

r

LacZ: encode for beta-galactosidaseLacY: encode for beta-galactosidase permeaseLacA: encode for beta-galactosidase transacetylase

Repressor gene

r

LacI: encode repressor protein

Regulation

Adenylyl cyclase

CAP

r

Adenylyl cyclase converts ATP to cAMP, which binds CAP and activate it. Activated CAP helps RNAP to bind promoter to start transcription.

Positive regulation

r

When lactose is present, lacI binds to lactose, so it no longer bind to the operator sequence, so RNAP can now bind promoter. In addition, when glucose level is low, adenylyl cyclase level is high, which converts ATP to cAMP. cAMP binds CAP and activated CAP helps RNAP to bind promoter to start transcription.

Negative regulation

r

Two scenarios: When lactose is not present, lacI bind to operator and prevent expression of lac operon genes.When glucose is present, it inhibits adenylyl cyclase, which results in no cAMP. so CAP is not activated, and cannot help RNAP bind promoter.

Cluster structural genes

r

A cluster of genes that are involved in the same pathway and regulated together

Operator

r

DNA switches, positioned near/within the promoter

Promoter

Mutations- Cambry

r

Mutations are any types of changes in DNAMutations occur in the coding sequence

Silent Mutations

r

Change in DNA= No change in amino acid

Missense Mutations

r

Change in DNA= Amino acid changed

Nonsense Mutations

r

Change in DNA= stop codon

Frameshift Mutations

r

Change in DNA= Reading frame changed causing a change in amino acids Only see frameshift when one or two nucleotides are added/deleted! Anything more isn't a frameshift

Transcription
and RNA processing- Charlotte

Eukaryotes

Initiation

r

**Note: before initiation occurs, DNA is packed into nucleosomes by histones that make DNA accessibleTranscription factors bind to the promoter region (e.g., TATA box).TATA box tells RNA polymerase II to "start here."RNA polymerase II is recruited to the promoter (written as +1), forming the pre-initiation complex.The DNA strands are separated, exposing the template strand.

Elongation

r

RNA polymerase II begins synthesizing RNA using the DNA template strand.The enzyme moves along the gene, building the pre-mRNA strand in the 5′→3′ direction.Elongation factors help the polymerase move through nucleosomes.

Termination

r

RNA polymerase II transcribes beyond the end of the gene.The pre-mRNA is cleaved, and a poly-A tail is added.RNA polymerase II detaches from the DNA.

RNA processing

r

The newly made pre-mRNA is capped at the 5′ end.Introns are removed (splicing), and exons are joined.A poly-A tail is added at the 3′ end.The mature mRNA is exported from the nucleus to the cytoplasm for translation.

Prokaryotes

r

In prokaryotes, transcription occurs in the cytoplasm and is coupled with translation.

Initation

r

RNA polymerase attaches to a specific spot on the DNA called the promoter.The DNA unwinds so the enzyme can read one strand.

Elongation

r

RNA polymerase moves along the DNA, building an RNA strand by matching RNA bases to the DNA template.The new RNA strand grows longer as the enzyme moves.

Termination

r

When RNA polymerase reaches a special sequence called a terminator, it stops.The RNA strand is released.

Translation
and Protein Synthesis- Charlotte

Prokaryotes

r

**Nearly identical to translation in eukaryotes,note that translation is coupled with transcription in prokaryotes. Both processes occur simultaneously in the cytoplasm, unlike in eukaryotes.

Initiation

r

The small ribosome subunit binds to a specific sequence on the mRNA called the Shine-Dalgarno sequence (just before the start codon).The initiator tRNA (fMet) pairs with the start codon (AUG).The large ribosome subunit joins to form a complete ribosome.

Elongation

r

The ribosome reads the next codon on the mRNA.A matching tRNA brings in the correct amino acid.The ribosome links the new amino acid to the growing protein chain.The ribosome moves to the next codon, and the process repeats, adding more amino acids.

Termination

r

When the ribosome reaches a stop codon (UAA, UAG, or UGA), no tRNA matches.A release factor binds, causing the ribosome to release the finished protein.The ribosome subunits separate and can be used again.

Eukaryotes

r

TerminationWhen the ribosome reaches a stop codon (UAA, UAG, or UGA), no tRNA matches.A release factor binds, causing the ribosome to release the finished protein.The ribosome subunits separate and can be reused.

Initiation

r

Key steps to initiation in translation:The small ribosome subunit binds to the 5' cap of the mRNA.It scans along the mRNA to find the start codon (AUG).The initiator tRNA (carrying methionine) pairs with the start codon.The large ribosome subunit joins, forming a complete ribosome.from here a a polypeptide/ amino acid chain can begin to form

Elongation

r

Key step to Elongation in translation:Now that the ribosome is completed, and the first t-RNA has bound to the start codon in the P slot, more t-RNAs can bind their anti-codons to codons along the mRNA A codon matching tRNA brings in the correct amino acid with it.The ribosome links the new amino acid to the growing protein chain.The ribosome moves to the next codon, and the process repeats, adding more amino acids.Ribosomal slotsThe initiator tRNA enters the middle P slot to begin protein synthesisThis is where the chain will begin to formThe ribosome will move across the mRNA, reading 5' to 3' with a new amino acid carrying tRNA entering the A slotAs amino acids are attached going down the mRNA, the tRNA detaches and exits from the E slot in the ribosome

Termination

r

Key parts of Termination in translationWhen the ribosome reaches a stop codon (UAA, UAG, or UGA), no amino acid-carrying tRNA matches.Instead, a release factor binds, causing the ribosome to release the finished protein.The two ribosomal subunits separate from each other and can then be reused.

Secretery Pathway

r

Depending on a protein's function, sometimes there are additional steps before a protein can be useful to a cell.In the secretory pathway, a signal sequence binds to the ribosome, that's creating a polypeptide, to the SRP on the Endoplasmic Reticulum. In the ER, a process called glycolysis occurs, where carbohydrates are bound, creating a more complex protein. After carbohydrates are added, signal peptidase removes the signal sequence, and the protein can be sent to the Golgi apparatus. Here, proteins are packaged and sent to work for lysosomes or the plasma membrane.

Glycolyzation

r

Glycosylation is the process by which a carbohydrate is covalently attached to a target macromolecule, such as proteins and lipids.