Gene
A gene is a unit of genetic information that is trancribed into mRNA and then translated to create a polypeptide chain of a specific sequence. Alleles are different forms of a gene, and are present in a diploid cell on both of the homologous chromosomes at the exact same loci. They are variants because of mutations; random nitrogenous base sequence changes that lead to different nucleotide sequences. A different base sequence can therefore code for a different codon on the mRNA transcribing molecule, and therefore lead to the binding of a different anticodon on a tRNA molecule, producing an alternate sequence of amino acids during the process of translation on the ribosome. This alternate sequence of amino acids may produce a different protein to the non-mutated form of the gene. In this way, genes are vital coding units for the proteins of the cell [1].
References
- ↑ Bruce Alberts et al.(2002)'Molecular Biology of the Cell' -- 4th ed. New York, Garland Science.