3. Molecular Code
• DNA stores/transmits a
“code”
• 4 nitrogen bases A, T, C, G
• 20 essential amino acids
A colored scanning electron micrograph of
a group of human chromosomes (x6,875)
4. Transcription
Transcription is the process by which one
strand of the DNA is copied to form a
complimentary strand of messenger RNA
(mRNA)
10. A transmission electron micrograph
of an unidentified operon of the
bacterium Escherichia coli, x72,600.
Ribosomes attach to mRNA, and
protein synthesis begins even before
transcription is complete.
11. RNA Processing
• the primary mRNA transcript may be
200,000 nucleotides in length
• mRNA in the cytoplasm is only a few
1000 nucleotides in length
• mRNA is modified (processed) before
leaving the nucleus
12. Enzymes attach a
cap of chemically
modified guanine
nucleotides (methyl-
guanine, or mG) to
the starting end of
the mRNA molecule
13. Other enzymes then
replace part of the
opposite end with a tail
of 100–200 adenine
nucleotides called a poly-
A tail
14. The final step in mRNA
processing involves
removal of some internal
segments of the RNA that
do not code for protein
called introns
15. The parts of the
transcript that remain
(and code for protein)
are called exons. They
are joined together in a
process called splicing.