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  2. Translocase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Translocase

    The reaction is designated as a transfer from “side 1” to “side 2” because the designations “in” and “out”, which had previously been used, can be ambiguous. [1] Translocases are the most common secretion system in Gram positive bacteria .

  3. Eukaryotic translation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eukaryotic_translation

    Translation is one of the key energy consumers in cells, hence it is strictly regulated. Numerous mechanisms have evolved that control and regulate translation in eukaryotes as well as prokaryotes. Regulation of translation can impact the global rate of protein synthesis which is closely coupled to the metabolic and proliferative state of a cell.

  4. Kinase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kinase

    General reaction that is catalyzed by kinases. Kinases mediate the transfer of a phosphate moiety from a high energy molecule (such as ATP) to their substrate molecule, as seen in the figure below. Kinases are needed to stabilize this reaction because the phosphoanhydride bond contains a high level of energy. Kinases properly orient their ...

  5. Translation (biology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Translation_(biology)

    The energy required for translation of proteins is significant. For a protein containing n amino acids, the number of high-energy phosphate bonds required to translate it is 4 n -1. [ 9 ] The rate of translation varies; it is significantly higher in prokaryotic cells (up to 17–21 amino acid residues per second) than in eukaryotic cells (up to ...

  6. Signal transduction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signal_transduction

    Histidine-specific protein kinases are structurally distinct from other protein kinases and are found in prokaryotes, fungi, and plants as part of a two-component signal transduction mechanism: a phosphate group from ATP is first added to a histidine residue within the kinase, then transferred to an aspartate residue on a receiver domain on a ...

  7. Protein metabolism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protein_metabolism

    The process of bind an amino acid to a tRNA is known as tRNA charging. Here, the enzyme aminoacyl-tRNA-synthetase catalyzes two reactions. In the first one, it attaches an AMP molecule (cleaved from ATP) to the amino acid. The second reaction cleaves the aminoacyl-AMP producing the energy to join the amino acid to the tRNA molecule. [14]

  8. Cell signaling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cell_signaling

    The signal transduction component labeled as "MAPK" in the pathway was originally called "ERK," so the pathway is called the MAPK/ERK pathway. The MAPK protein is an enzyme, a protein kinase that can attach phosphate to target proteins such as the transcription factor MYC and, thus, alter gene transcription and, ultimately, cell cycle ...

  9. Tyrosine phosphorylation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyrosine_phosphorylation

    Cartoon representation of the molecular structure of protein domain: p56 lck tyrosine kinase. Tyrosine phosphorylation is the addition of a phosphate (PO 4 3−) group to the amino acid tyrosine on a protein. It is one of the main types of protein phosphorylation. This transfer is made possible through enzymes called tyrosine kinases. Tyrosine ...