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Discovering Biology in a Digital World

My thoughts on biology, teaching, life, and exploring the living world via the digital one. Only my opinions are represented by these postings, they do not represent the viewpoints of any funding agency or Geospiza, Inc.

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Sandra Porter I am a microbiologist and molecular biologist turned tenured biotech faculty turned bioinformatics scientist turned entrepreneur. My passion is developing instructional materials for 21st century biology (Geospiza Education).

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    « Digital Biology Friday: A DNA sequencing data puzzle | Main | Mapping polymorphisms in 16S ribosomal RNA »

    Meet the ribosomes

    Category: EvolutionGenetics & Molecular BiologyScience educationVideosmolecular structures
    Posted on: April 16, 2008 7:54 PM, by Sandra Porter

    Ribosomes are molecular machines that build new proteins. This process of synthesizing a protein is also known as translation.

    Many antibiotics prevent translation by binding to ribosomal RNA. In the class that I'm teaching, we're going to be looking at ribosome structures to see if the polymorphisms that we find in the sequences of 16S ribosomal RNA are related antibiotic resistance.

    This is related to our metagenomics project where we investigate the polymorphisms we find in 16S ribosomal RNAs.

    This 6 minute video introduces ribosomes, discusses where they're found, what they're made of, how they're built, and discusses why some parts of the ribosome might be under less selective pressure than others.


    Meet the ribosomes from Sandra Porter on Vimeo.

    Comments

    #1
    Ribosomes are molecular machines that build new proteins. This process of synthesizing a protein is also known as translation.

    I prefer to say that ribosomes are an important component of the translation machine. In addition to ribosomes, the translation machine includes mRNA, aminoacyl-tRNAs, and several kinds of initiation, elongation, and termination protein factors. The idea that ribosomes alone make proteins is not correct and I think it's more than a quibble to insist that aminoacyl-tRNAs and the translation factors be included.

    Posted by: Larry Moran | April 17, 2008 12:09 PM

    #2

    I like tRNAs, without them the ribosomes wouldn't have any amino acids to put together.

    And I think tRNAs deserve their own video.

    Posted by: Sandra Porter | April 17, 2008 10:20 PM

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