Transcription in Prokaryotes: - Initiation: RNA polymerase binds to the promoter region of DNA, initiating the process of transcription. - Elongation: RNA polymerase synthesizes RNA in the 5’ to 3’ direction, creating an RNA sequence complementary to the DNA template strand. - Termination: Transcription stops when RNA polymerase reaches the terminator sequence. The newly formed RNA transcript is released.
Differences between Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Transcription:
- RNA Polymerase: - Prokaryotes use a single RNA polymerase for transcription. - Eukaryotes have three distinct RNA polymerases (RNA Polymerase I, II, and III), each responsible for transcribing specific types of RNA.
- Location: - In prokaryotes, transcription occurs in the cytoplasm, and translation begins immediately after transcription. - In eukaryotes, transcription occurs in the nucleus, and the RNA transcript must undergo processing before it is transported to the cytoplasm for translation.
- RNA Processing: - Prokaryotic RNA does not require processing and is directly functional as mRNA. - Eukaryotic RNA undergoes capping (addition of a methylated guanosine cap at the 5’ end), tailing (addition of a poly-A tail at the 3’ end), and splicing (removal of non-coding introns and joining of coding exons) to become a mature mRNA.
The process of copying the genetic information from one strand of DNA into RNA is termed as transcription. The principle of complementarity of bases governs the process of transcription, also except that uracil comes in place of thymine. Study the complete transcription unit given below and answer the following questions:
Describe the location of (C) and (D) in the transcription unit.
The process of copying the genetic information from one strand of DNA into RNA is termed as transcription. The principle of complementarity of bases governs the process of transcription, also except that uracil comes in place of thymine. Study the complete transcription unit given below and answer the following questions:
Identify (C) and (D) in the diagram, mention their significance in the process of transcription.
The process of copying the genetic information from one strand of DNA into RNA is termed as transcription. The principle of complementarity of bases governs the process of transcription, also except that uracil comes in place of thymine. Study the complete transcription unit given below and answer the following questions:
Identify coding strand and template strand of DNA in the transcription unit.
The process of copying the genetic information from one strand of DNA into RNA is termed as transcription. The principle of complementarity of bases governs the process of transcription, also except that uracil comes in place of thymine. Study the complete transcription unit given below and answer the following questions:
Name the main enzyme involved in the process of transcription.