Traducción o biosíntesis de proteinas
What is Translation in Cells?
Overview of Translation Process
- The translation process transforms messenger RNA (mRNA) information into proteins, which perform various functions within cells.
- mRNA is encoded using four nucleotides (adenine, cytosine, guanine, and uracil), while proteins are made up of 20 different amino acids.
- The transition from a coding system of four nucleotides to one of twenty amino acids highlights the complexity of protein synthesis.
Pre-Translation Phase
- Before translation begins, amino acids must be prepared for linking; this involves attaching an amino acid to a transfer RNA (tRNA).
- This attachment requires energy in the form of ATP and is facilitated by the enzyme aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase.
- Each amino acid has a specific tRNA associated with it, ensuring accurate translation according to the genetic code.
Importance of Codon-Anticodon Matching
- Each tRNA has an anticodon that pairs with a corresponding codon on the mRNA; this specificity prevents errors during protein synthesis.
- If multiple tRNAs could bind to the same codon but carried different amino acids, it would lead to incorrect protein formation.
Phases of Translation: Initiation
Eukaryotic Initiation Signals
- In eukaryotes, initiation requires two signals: a start codon (AUG) and a methylguanylate cap at the 5' end of mRNA.
- The ribosome assembles around these signals; first detecting the cap before locating the start codon.
Role of Methionine
- The start codon AUG codes for methionine, making it the first amino acid in all proteins synthesized during translation.
Ribosome Assembly
- Once initiation signals are detected, the small ribosomal subunit binds to mRNA followed by tRNA carrying methionine.
- Subsequently, the large ribosomal subunit joins to complete assembly for translation initiation.
Elongation Phase
Mechanism of Elongation
- During elongation, additional amino acids are added sequentially to form a polypeptide chain as dictated by mRNA sequence.
Ribosome Functionality
Translation of Protein Synthesis Process
Key Concepts in Translation
- The translation process involves two main sites on the ribosome: the P site (peptidyl site) where the growing polypeptide chain is formed, and the A site (aminoacyl site) where new amino acids are added.
- The initiation phase begins with the binding of transfer RNA (tRNA) carrying methionine to the start codon, followed by subsequent tRNAs that match with their respective codons.
- Peptidyl transferase enzyme facilitates peptide bond formation by cleaving the bond between the amino acid at the P site and linking it to the amino group of a new amino acid at the A site.
- After each addition of an amino acid, GTP energy is utilized for translocation, moving the ribosome along mRNA to expose new codons for further tRNA binding.