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Proteins - continued peptide chain elongation

The cycle of peptide-chain elongation continues until one of the three stop codons (UAA, UAG, UGA) is reached. There is no aminoacyl-tRNA complementary to these codons, and instead a termination factor or a release factor (RF) with bound GTP binds to the ribosome and induces hydrolysis of both the aminoacyl-linkage and GTP, thereby releasing the completed polypeptide chain from the ribosome. The 475 amino acid-long sequence of rabbit liver RF has been deduced from its cDNA sequence, and it shows 90% homology with mammalian trypto-phanyl-tRNA synthetase (Lee et al., 1990). It has also been reported that for efficient and accurate termination, an additional fourth nucleotide (most commonly an A or a G) after the stop codon is required (Tate and Brown, 1992). The exact role of the fourth nucleotide in the termination of protein synthesis is not fully understood at present. [Pg.257]


See other pages where Proteins - continued peptide chain elongation is mentioned: [Pg.174]    [Pg.66]    [Pg.48]    [Pg.675]    [Pg.663]    [Pg.281]    [Pg.194]    [Pg.209]    [Pg.338]    [Pg.504]    [Pg.506]    [Pg.278]    [Pg.28]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.218 ]




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