DNA-RNA-Protein
Introduction
DNA carries the genetic information
of a cell and consists of thousands of genes. Each
gene serves as a recipe on how to build a protein
molecule. Proteins perform important tasks for the
cell functions or serve as building blocks. The flow
of information from the genes determines the protein
composition and thereby the functions of the
cell.
The DNA is situated in the nucleus,
organized into chromosomes. Every cell must contain
the genetic information and the DNA is therefore
duplicated before a cell divides (replication). When
proteins are needed, the corresponding genes are
transcribed into RNA (transcription). The RNA
is first processed so that non-coding parts are
removed (processing) and is then
transported out of the nucleus (transport). Outside the
nucleus, the proteins are built based upon the code
in the RNA (translation).
The document has two levels, basic
and advanced. This page is an introduction to both
levels. You start at the basic level, then you can
advance if you want more and deeper information.
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