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Halt-transfer signal

Selenium is incorporated into Se-requiring enzymes by the modification of serine. This serine is not modified when it is in the free state or when it occurs in a polypeptide chain. The serine residue in question is modified when it occurs boimd to transfer RNA, that is, eis the aminoacyl-tRNA derivative. Seryl-tRNA is converted to selenocysteinyl-tRNAby the action of selenocysteine synthase (Stur-chler et al, 1993). The codon for selenocysteine is UGA (TGA in DNA UGA in mRNA). The fact that this particular triplet of bases codes for an amino acid is very imusual, as UGA normally is a stop codon. Stop codons occur in mRNA and signal the termination of synthesis of the protein however, in the case of the UGA codons that code for selenocysteine residues, regions of the mRNA that lie beyond the coding sequence somehow convert the UGA from a codon that halts translation to one that codes for selenocysteine (Figure 10.55). The structure of selenocysteine is shown in Figure 10.56. [Pg.825]


See other pages where Halt-transfer signal is mentioned: [Pg.506]    [Pg.506]    [Pg.504]    [Pg.506]    [Pg.507]    [Pg.110]    [Pg.825]    [Pg.112]    [Pg.146]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.506 ]




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