translation to the plasma membrane
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Please draw or trace a pathway of any protein from translation to the plasma membrane. Name the protein (make sure it is a transemembrane protein). The protein in question must also have seceral protein modifications including, but not limited to, N-linked glycosylation, cysteine disulfide bonds, lipid modifications, and 3-D folding
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- Many antibiotics are effective as drugs to fight off bacterial infections because they inhibit protein synthesis in bacterial cells. Using the information provided in the following table that highlights several antibiotics and their mode of action, discuss which phase of translation is inhibited: initiation, elongation, or termination. What other components of the translational machinery could be targeted to inhibit bacterial protein synthesis? Antibiotic Action 1. Streptomycin Binds to 30S ribosomal subunit 2. Chloramphenicol Inhibits peptidyl transferase of 70S ribosome 3. Tetracycline Inhibits binding of charged tRNA to the A site of the ribosome 4. Erythromycin Binds to free 50S particle and prevents formation of 70S ribosome 5. Kasugamycin Inhibits binding of tRNAfMet 6. Thiostrepton Prevents translocation by inhibiting EF-GPlace the steps below in the correct order to accurately reflect the steps by which a secretory protein is co-translationally imported into the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum: As the polypeptide elongates and translocates into the ER, the signal peptidase cleaves the signal peptide. The SRP binds the SRP receptor, directing the ribosome to dock on the ER membrane. Termination of translation, results in the release of the polypeptide into the ER lumen, release of the ribosome from the ER membrane, and closing of the channel. The signal recognition particle (SRP) binds to the signal sequence on a newly synthesized polypeptide and stalls translation. The channel in the ER membrane opens and the polypeptide is inserted into the ER lumen. The SRP is released. A.6-4-2-3-1-5 B.4-2-5-1-3-6 C.3-1-6-2-4-5 D.1-2-3-4-5-6 E.2-6-1-5-4-3All of the following are true about translation EXCEPT _____. as the ribosome moves from codon to codon, amino acids brought by successive tRNAs to the ribosome form a growing polypeptide when the ribosome reaches a stop codon, its subunits detach, and the mRNA and new polypeptide are released RNA polymerase assembles a strand of mRNA complementary to the coding strand of DNA Ribosomal subunits and a tRNA-carrying methionine converge on the start codon of an mRNA
- Arrange the following components of translation in the approximate order in which they would appear or be used in prokaryotic protein synthesis, from first to last.30S initiation complex70S initation complexElongation Factor TuElongation Factor GInitiation Factor 3Release Factor 1fMet-TRNA fMetWhich of the following are stages of translation? Select all that apply. a.As the ribosome moves from codon to codon, amino acids brought by successive tRNAs to the ribosome form a growing polypeptide. b.A tRNA binds to the second codon and its carried amino acid forms a peptide bond with methionine. c.When the ribosome reaches a stop codon, its subunits detach, and the mRNA and new polypeptide are released. d.Ribosomal subunits and a tRNA carrying methionine converge on the start codon of an mRNA. e.The binding of a tRNA to the third codon causes the ribosome to release the first tRNA and move to the next codon.Which of the following best describes a sequence of events that happens during the elongation phase of translation? Group of answer choices A charged tRNA enters the P site of a ribosome; a tRNA bound to a peptide moves to the A site; an tRNA bound to a peptide exits the E site. None of these is an accurate description A charged tRNA enters the A site of a ribosome; a tRNA bound to a peptide moves to the P site; an uncharged tRNA exits the E site. An uncharged tRNA enters the A site of a ribosome; a tRNA bound to a peptide moves to the P site; a charged tRNA exits the E site. A charged tRNA enters the A site of a ribosome; a tRNA bound to a peptide moves to the E site; an tRNA bound to a peptide exits the A site.
- What distinguishes proteins that will be released into the cytoplasm after translation from proteins that will be released into the rough ER after translation? whether they are synthesized by small or large ribosomal subunits whether they will be enzymes or structural proteins presence of a signal sequence on the protein number of start codons on their mRNAs how hydrophobic the proteins areWhich of the following statements about translation is false? In eukaryotes, the 5' cap and the 3' poly(A) tail are involved in translation initiation. Peptidyl-transferase activity during translation is the property of a ribozyme. A base at the first position of an anticodon on the tRNA would pair with a base at the third position of the mRNA. The growing peptide chain is transferred from the tRNA in the P site to the tRNA in the A site. Ribosomes move along an mRNA in the 3’ → 5' direction.A synthetic mRNA added to a cell-free protein-synthesizing system produces a peptide with the following amino acid sequence: Met-ProIle-Ser-Ala. What would be the effect on translation if the following component were omitted from the cell-free protein-synthesizing system? What, if any, type of protein would be produced? Explain your reasoning. Q. ATP
- in the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi-complex, the determination of proper folding depends on what type of post- translational modifications? help me to understand what the answer is as i am doing correction so i can get points back.In eukaryotic cells, secreted proteins are initially directed to the endoplasmic reticulum and then via the Golgi, where they are released into the extracellular environment through secretory vesicles. A more easier way would be for secretory protein-producing ribosomes to be localised to a translocon in the plasma membrane, with the protein being secreted directly during translation. Consider three possible benefits of the more roundabout method for protein secretion versus the simpler, more straightforward approach indicated.Which of the following are stages of translation? Select all that apply. A. A tRNA binds to the second codon and its carried amino acid forms a peptide bond with methionine. B. As the ribosome moves from codon to codon, amino acids brought by successive tRNAs to the ribosome form a growing polypeptide. C. When the ribosome reaches a stop codon, its subunits detach, and the mRNA and new polypeptide are released. D. Ribosomal subunits and a tRNA carrying methionine converge on the start codon of an mRNA. E. The binding of a tRNA to the third codon causes the ribosome to release the first tRNA and move to the next codon.