Protein Synthesis | Cells | Biology | FuseSchool

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Protein Synthesis | Cells | Biology | FuseSchool

Proteins are made of a long chain of amino acids, which has been coded for by DNA. The order of the bases of DNA determines which protein is made, by coding for a specific order of amino acids. This is protein synthesis, and in this video we are going to look at how it works. You may want to watch our ‘what is DNA’ video first to remind yourself all about DNA.

A set of three bases in the DNA molecule codes for a particular amino acid. GGT, for example, codes for the amino acid called Glycine. The 3 base codes are known as codons, so GGT is a “codon” for Glycine.

There are 20 amino acids that make up our body’s proteins. 9 of these we need to take in through our diet as our body cannot manufacture them. These are known as essential amino acids.
Our body can, however, manufacture non-essential amino acids. Whilst 20 amino acids build proteins, there are actually many others that do not form proteins, possibly over 250. They may form sugar, for example.

Before we start, you need to know what RNA is - so you may want to watch our ‘what is RNA’ video first.

The DNA is in the nucleus and cannot move, but the ribosomes in the cytoplasm are where the proteins are made. This means the code from the DNA needs to be copied and carried across to the ribosome by a molecule called messenger RNA or mRNA before the protein can be made. Let’s have a look at how this all works.

In the nucleus, the enzyme RNA polymerase unwinds and unzips the two strands of DNA that contain the protein-making gene. Only one of these strands is going to be replicated. Complementary RNA nucleotides base pair with the chosen strand. RNA polymerase also binds the RNA nucleotides together making a new RNA strand. This is the messenger RNA or mRNA. This process inside the nucleus is called transcription.

The mRNA travels from the cell nucleus and out into the cytoplasm, until it reaches and attaches to a ribosome. The ribosome then sticks amino acids together to make a polypeptide chain, following the order of amino acids as coded by the mRNA. Three base codons on the mRNA code for one amino acid. This process is called translation.

Let’s look at translation in a little more detail - what is actually happening inside the ribosome...

Transfer RNA or tRNA molecules, carrying specific amino acids, base pair with the mRNA inside the ribosome. So the tRNA brings in the amino acids and the mRNA provides the information of the exact order that the amino acids need to be bonded together in, to ensure the correct protein is made. As more tRNAs match up with the mRNA, the amino acid chain becomes longer. Eventually the polypeptide chain will form into the protein. So there we have protein synthesis.

Inside the nucleus, the DNA molecule is unzipped from around the gene by DNA polymerase. The DNA is replicated and mRNA is formed in the process of transcription. The mRNA travels out of the nucleus and into the cytoplasm, where it binds with a ribosome. In the ribosome, the nucleotide sequence of the mRNA is translated by tRNA molecules which carry related amino acids. The polypeptide chain is formed, and will eventually fold into the required protein.

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This is the best video i have seen on protein synthesis. Thank you so much

rimshafawad
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This graphical animation made it so much easier to understand. Thanks a lot for making this!

supremechancellor
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I kept pausing to make notes and rewatching the animations and descriptions and THIS MAKES SO MUCH SENSE!! Thank you so much :DDD

sophiereading
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now i know that there a two steps of takes the synthesis of protein.the transcription and translation.and the animation help a lot to understand it easily.❤

abbyyow
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GAL!! you should do MORE voice-overs as your explanation is THE

SharkRockstar
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This is just what i needed, an almost sarcastically slow explanation haha thanks for saving!

natashasmith
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This topic is the bane of my existence but thanks for the clear explanation! 🙃

N_S
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Oh my word! I LOVE THIS! I TOTALLY GET IT NOW!!!! Thank

rockmamabaker
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I have watched like 12 other videos at least 3 times, just trying to understand this concept of Protein synthesis, and this is the only video that ACTUALLY MAKES SENSE!! I thank you so much for teaching me an entire concept in like 5 min.

nalexaadams
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Thankyou!!!! Maybe go a little slower next time but you have saved my life 💗💗💗

meghatfield
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MISTAKE at 4:20 the DNA is unzipped " by DNA polymerase " is wrong it should be unzipped by DNA helicase

razanmadani
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dna polymerase doesn't unwind the DNA, it's the helicase that does this...

arina
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Thank you very much lovely lady 😂 now I understand it ! 💖

yourfavouritescepticx
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Ya it's very best video I like it very much and I have clear all my concepts which I didn't understood and I have done well thank you so much

gaurisamant
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This is very precise and on point for protein synthesis. The best video I have ever watched!! thank youu

roshni
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Omgggg this is so smooth and so helpful thx alooot 😍❤️

jimmyyyyy
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thank you so much ...you save me cuz i have a report and its all about protein synthesis omg thank youuuu

carlenmaeamorada
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After a long time i got a real image of this action....thank you so much ❤❤☺...i downloaded this viedo

muralidask
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This video helped me understand the lesson thanks a lot

elyanalkadi
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Overall, I really like the how protein synthesis is described in this video. However, there are some mistakes at the beginning (before the 1 minute mark). At the beginning, when showing the DNA and protein/amino acids, you say the DNA has codons and that GGT codes for glycine, which isn't correct. The mRNA made from DNA has the codons. GGT can't be a codon, and the mRNA made from it is CCA, which codes for proline. As the video goes on, codons and mRNA are explained correctly, but the start of the video is very wrong.

kelsiekendrick