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  2. Signal recognition particle RNA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Signal_recognition_particle_RNA

    n/a Ensembl ENSG00000276168 n/a UniProt n a n/a RefSeq (mRNA) n/a n/a RefSeq (protein) n/a n/a Location (UCSC) Chr 14: 49.59 – 49.59 Mb n/a PubMed search n/a Wikidata View/Edit Human Secondary structure of the human SRP RNA. Helices are numbered from 2 to 8. Helical sections in gray are named with lower case letters. Residues are numbered in increments of ten. The 5′- and 3′-ends are ...

  3. Signal recognition particle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signal_recognition_particle

    The signal recognition particle (SRP) is an abundant, cytosolic, universally conserved ribonucleoprotein (protein-RNA complex) that recognizes and targets specific proteins to the endoplasmic reticulum in eukaryotes and the plasma membrane in prokaryotes.

  4. RNA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RNA

    It has sites for amino acid attachment and an anticodon region for codon recognition that binds to a specific sequence on the messenger RNA chain through hydrogen bonding. [32] A diagram of how mRNA is used to create polypeptide chains. Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) is the catalytic component of the ribosomes. The rRNA is the component of the ribosome ...

  5. Ribozyme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ribozyme

    An RNA sequence that folds into a ribozyme is capable of invading duplexed RNA, rearranging into an open holopolymerase complex, and then searching for a specific RNA promoter sequence, and upon recognition rearrange again into a processive form that polymerizes a complementary strand of the sequence.

  6. Here’s what a Nobel Prize-winning scientist wants you ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/nobel-prize-winning-scientist-breaks...

    The RNA technology is so quick to repurpose to a new disease that you don’t have to just target diseases that have an enormous patient population — where you can recoup the large cost of drug ...

  7. List of RNAs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_RNAs

    Small RNA that is activated by SgrR in Escherichia coli during glucose-phosphate stress shRNA: short hairpin RNA - siRNA: small interfering RNA - SL RNA spliced leader RNA multiple families: SmY RNA: mRNA trans-splicing RF01844: Small nuclear RNAs found in some species of nematode worms, thought to be involved in mRNA trans-splicing snoRNA ...

  8. Transcriptional regulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transcriptional_regulation

    In the absence of other regulatory elements, a promoter's sequence-based affinity for RNA polymerases varies, which results in the production of different amounts of transcript. The variable affinity of RNA polymerase for different promoter sequences is related to regions of consensus sequence upstream of the transcription start site. The more ...

  9. Consensus sequence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consensus_sequence

    Thus a consensus sequence is a model for a putative DNA binding site: it is obtained by aligning all known examples of a certain recognition site and defined as the idealized sequence that represents the predominant base at each position. All the actual examples shouldn't differ from the consensus by more than a few substitutions, but counting ...