When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Transfer RNA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transfer_RNA

    A tRNA is commonly named by its intended amino acid (e.g. tRNA-Asn), by its anticodon sequence (e.g. tRNA(GUU)), or by both (e.g. tRNA-Asn(GUU) or tRNA Asn GUU ). [ 19 ] These two features describe the main function of the tRNA, but do not actually cover the whole diversity of tRNA variation; as a result, numerical suffixes are added to ...

  3. Queuosine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queuosine

    Queuosine is a modified nucleoside that is present in certain tRNAs in bacteria and eukaryotes. [1] [2] It contains the nucleobase queuine.Originally identified in E. coli, queuosine was found to occupy the first anticodon position of tRNAs for histidine, aspartic acid, asparagine and tyrosine. [3]

  4. Gene product - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gene_product

    A gene product is the biochemical material, either RNA or protein, resulting from the expression of a gene. A measurement of the amount of gene product is sometimes used to infer how active a gene is. Abnormal amounts of gene product can be correlated with disease-causing alleles, such as the overactivity of oncogenes, which can cause cancer.

  5. Housekeeping gene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Housekeeping_gene

    For experimental purposes, the expression of one or multiple housekeeping genes is used as a reference point for the analysis of expression levels of other genes. The key criterion for the use of a housekeeping gene in this manner is that the chosen housekeeping gene is uniformly expressed with low variance under both control and experimental ...

  6. Translation (biology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Translation_(biology)

    The amino acid is joined by its carboxyl group to the 3' OH of the tRNA by an ester bond. When the tRNA has an amino acid linked to it, the tRNA is termed "charged". In bacteria, this aminoacyl-tRNA is carried to the ribosome by EF-Tu, where mRNA codons are matched through complementary base pairing to specific tRNA anticodons. Aminoacyl-tRNA ...

  7. Non-coding RNA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-coding_RNA

    The main function of miRNAs is to down-regulate gene expression. The ncRNA RNase P has also been shown to influence gene expression. In the human nucleus, RNase P is required for the normal and efficient transcription of various ncRNAs transcribed by RNA polymerase III. These include tRNA, 5S rRNA, SRP RNA, and U6 snRNA genes.

  8. Gene expression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gene_expression

    These products are often proteins, but in non-protein-coding genes such as transfer RNA (tRNA) and small nuclear RNA (snRNA), the product is a functional non-coding RNA. The process of gene expression is used by all known life— eukaryotes (including multicellular organisms ), prokaryotes ( bacteria and archaea ), and utilized by viruses —to ...

  9. Group I catalytic intron - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_I_catalytic_intron

    Splicing of group I introns is processed by two sequential transesterification reactions. [3] First an exogenous guanosine or guanosine nucleotide (exoG) docks onto the active G-binding site located in P7, and then its 3'-OH is aligned to attack the phosphodiester bond at the "upstream" (closer to the 5' end) splice site located in P1, resulting in a free 3'-OH group at the upstream exon and ...