Elongation factor: Difference between revisions
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Added the references correctly, that is, I added them as explained in the lecture. How about adding some links? |
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Elongation factors are a set of proteins that | Elongation factors are a set of proteins that bring new [[TRNA|t-RNA]] to the A-site and the movement of the t-RNA from A-site to p-site. | ||
=== Types of Elongation factors | === Types of Elongation factors === | ||
EF- Tu | EF- Tu | ||
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EF- G | EF- G | ||
=== Function === | === Function === | ||
EF- Tu: Binds GTP; brings aminoacyl- tRNA to the A site of | EF- Tu: Binds GTP; brings aminoacyl- tRNA to the A site of ribosome<br>EF- Ts: Generates active EF- Tu<br>EF- G: Stimulates translocation; GTP- dependent<ref>William S. Klug, Michael R. Cummings, Charlotte Spencer, Michael Palladino (2014). Concepts of Genetics Tenth Edition</ref> | ||
=== | === <u></u>References === | ||
<references /><br><br> | <references /><br><br> |
Latest revision as of 11:40, 22 October 2018
Elongation factors are a set of proteins that bring new t-RNA to the A-site and the movement of the t-RNA from A-site to p-site.
Types of Elongation factors
EF- Tu
EF- Ts
EF- G
Function
EF- Tu: Binds GTP; brings aminoacyl- tRNA to the A site of ribosome
EF- Ts: Generates active EF- Tu
EF- G: Stimulates translocation; GTP- dependent[1]
References
- ↑ William S. Klug, Michael R. Cummings, Charlotte Spencer, Michael Palladino (2014). Concepts of Genetics Tenth Edition