Elongation: Difference between revisions

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Elongation is the process by which [[Nucleotides|nucleotides]] are sequentially added to a strand of [[RNA|RNA]] during [[Transcription|transcription]] of a [[DNA|DNA]] [[Molecule|molecule]]. This process is mediated by elongation factors. For example, EF-Tu aids the correct pairing of mRNA and tRNA in protein synthesis using GTP as its energy carrier.<br><br><br><br><br><br>'''<u>References</u>'''
Elongation is the process by which [[Nucleotides|nucleotides]] are sequentially added to a strand of [[RNA|RNA]] during [[Transcription|transcription]] of a [[DNA|DNA]] [[Molecule|molecule]]. This process is mediated by elongation factors. For example, EF-Tu aids the correct pairing of [[MRNA|mRNA]] and [[TRNA|tRNA]] in [[Protein synthesis|protein synthesis]] using [[GTP|GTP]] as its energy carrier <ref>Alberts et al. (2008) Molecular Biology Of The Cell, 5th Edition. Pg180</ref>.<br>


'''<u><references /></u>'''Molecular Biology of the Cell, (5th Edition) Alberts et al, Garland Science (Pg 180)
=== References  ===
 
<references />

Latest revision as of 11:10, 16 October 2013

Elongation is the process by which nucleotides are sequentially added to a strand of RNA during transcription of a DNA molecule. This process is mediated by elongation factors. For example, EF-Tu aids the correct pairing of mRNA and tRNA in protein synthesis using GTP as its energy carrier [1].

References

  1. Alberts et al. (2008) Molecular Biology Of The Cell, 5th Edition. Pg180