Sunday, March 4, 2012

What is the function of DNA in translation?

A.Ribosomes bind of DNA to "read" codons during translation.

B.RNA polymerase uses the condos of DNA to align amino acids in tranlation.

C. DNA process the mRNA to align amino acids in translation.

D.DNA is the ennzyme for protein synthesis.

E.DNA is not directly involved.What is the function of DNA in translation?
DNA isn't directly involved. DNA provides the original template which is copied into an mRNA form during transcription, but DNA is not involved in translation.





Additionally, Will's answer isn't quite right, he is confusing replication with transcription. Helicase is only used in replication. RNA Polymerase III is the protein involved in mRNA creation. Also, RNA is made out of nucleic acids, not amino acids. mRNA codons code for the amino acids being added to the polypeptide chain during translation.What is the function of DNA in translation?
DNA is the blueprint for the RNA to move throughout the body. DNA Helicase (enzyme) "unzips" DNA and makes a copy, subsituting a particular amino acid, and makes single stranded strips that then go thoughout your bodyWhat is the function of DNA in translation?
C. DNA process the mRNA to align amino acids in translation
Ugh, I did a project on this is in 6th grade a long time ago. I'm gonna go with D. It's a guess. Don't hate on me if I'm wrong.

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