The Transfer RNA reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
(provided by Fixed Reference: snapshots of Wikipedia from wikipedia.org)

Transfer RNA

Sponsorship the way you would do it
tRNA
tRNA

Transfer RNA (abbreviated tRNA) is a small RNA chain (74-93 nucleotides) that transfers a specific amino acid to a growing polypeptide chain at the ribosomal site of protein synthesis during translation. It has sites for amino-acid attachment and codon (a particular sequence of 3 bases) recognition. The codon recognition is different for each tRNA and is determined by the anticodon region, which contains the complementary bases to the ones encountered on the mRNA. Each tRNA molecule binds only one type of amino acid, but because the genetic code is degenerate, more than one codon exists for each amino acid.

Transfer RNA is the "adaptor" molecule hypothesized by Francis Crick, which mediates recognition of the codon sequence in mRNA and allows its translation into the appropriate amino acid.

Table of contents
1 Structure of tRNA
2 See also

Structure of tRNA

tRNA has primary structure (the order of nucleotides from 5' to 3'), secondary structure (usually visualized as the cloverleaf structure), and tertiary structure (all tRNAs have a similar L-shaped 3D structure that allows them to fit into the P and A sites of the ribosome).

Features

  1. The 5'-terminal phosphate.
  2. The acceptor stem (also called the amino acid stem) is a 7-bp stem that incudes the 5'-terminal nucleotide and the 3'-terminal nucleotide with the 3'-terminal OH group (which can bind the amino acid). The acceptor stem may contain non-Watson-Crick base pairs.
  3. The CCA tail is a CCA sequence added to the 3' end of the tRNA molecule. This sequence is important for the recognition of tRNA by enzymes critical in translation.
  4. The D arm is a 4 bp stem ending in a loop that often contains dihydrouridine.
  5. The anticodon arm is a 5-bp stem containing the anticodon. Each tRNA contains a specific anticodon triplet sequence complementary to the codon for a particular amino acid. For example, the codon for lysine is UUU; the anticodon is AAA.
  6. The T arm is a 5 bp stem containing the sequence TψC.
  7. Modified bases are several bases contained in tRNA that are not "canonical" bases, i.e. that are modified forms of the standard adenine, guanine, cytosine, and uracil bases.

Aminoacetylation

Aminoacylation is the process of adding an aminoacyl group to a compound.

Each amino acid has a unique tRNA. Before translation, each tRNA is aminoacylated (or charged) by an aminoacyl tRNA synthetase. Each amino acid, but 'not' each codon, has a different aminoacyl tRNA synthetase. Recognition is not mediated primarily by the anticodon, which would require 64 separate tRNA synthetases, but rather by the acceptor stem of the molecule.

Reaction:

  1. amino acid + ATP → aminoacyl-AMP + PPi
  2. aminoacyl-AMP + tRNA → aminoacyl-tRNA + AMP

See also