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  2. Ribosome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ribosome

    Free and membrane-bound ribosomes differ only in their spatial distribution; they are identical in structure. Whether the ribosome exists in a free or membrane-bound state depends on the presence of an ER-targeting signal sequence on the protein being synthesized, so an individual ribosome might be membrane-bound when it is making one protein ...

  3. Eukaryotic small ribosomal subunit (40S) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eukaryotic_Small_Ribosomal...

    The 40S ribosomal subunit is also tightly bound by the HCV IRES to form a binary complex mediate by protein-mRNA and rRNA-mRNA interactions. [7] More information can be found in the articles on the ribosome, the eukaryotic ribosome (80S), and the article on protein translation.

  4. Protein targeting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protein_targeting

    Protein targeting or protein sorting is the biological mechanism by which proteins are transported to their appropriate destinations within or outside the cell. [1] [2] [note 1] Proteins can be targeted to the inner space of an organelle, different intracellular membranes, the plasma membrane, or to the exterior of the cell via secretion.

  5. Ribosomal protein - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ribosomal_protein

    The ribosome of E. coli has about 22 proteins in the small subunit (labelled S1 to S22) and 33 proteins in the large subunit (somewhat counter-intuitively called L1 to L36). All of them are different with three exceptions: one protein is found in both subunits (S20 and L26), [ dubious – discuss ] L7 and L12 are acetylated and methylated forms ...

  6. Directionality (molecular biology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Directionality_(molecular...

    If the transcript encodes one or (rarely) more proteins, translation of each protein by the ribosome will proceed in a 5′-to-3′ direction, and will extend the protein from its N-terminus toward its C-terminus. For example, in a typical gene a start codon (5′-ATG-3′) is a DNA sequence within the sense strand.

  7. Ribosome-binding site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ribosome-binding_site

    A ribosome binding site, or ribosomal binding site (RBS), is a sequence of nucleotides upstream of the start codon of an mRNA transcript that is responsible for the recruitment of a ribosome during the initiation of translation.

  8. Membrane bound polyribosome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Membrane_bound_polyribosome

    The polypeptides ribosomes produce go on to be cell structural proteins, enzymes, and many other things. [3] Ribosomes can also sometimes be associated with chloroplasts and mitochondria but these are not membrane bound. [3] The image shows a membrane-bound ribosome synthesizing a protein into the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum.

  9. P-site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P-site

    The ribosomal P-site plays a vital role in all phases of translation. Initiation involves recognition of the start codon (AUG) by initiator tRNA in the P-site, elongation involves passage of many elongator tRNAs through the P site, termination involves hydrolysis of the mature polypeptide from tRNA bound to the P-site, and ribosome recycling involves release of deacylated tRNA.