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I am learning about DNA. What determines the final shape of the proteins.

2006-11-15 11:46:23 · 6 answers · asked by Best Helper 4 in Science & Mathematics Biology

6 answers

In the tertiary structure the proteins are folded into their various shapes by the differing bonding caused by the arrangement of amino acids, Hydrogen, disufide and hydrophobic bonding are some of them. Chaperon and chaperonin proteins also reshape not fully folded or misfolded proteins.

2006-11-15 11:55:21 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Well I'm not too sure what you mean by shape, but the structure of the protein is composed of amino acids, which are in turn encoded by DNA.

DNA is transcribed onto messengerRNA (mRNA) which is than translated by transferRNA (tRNA) into amino acids. The tRNA "reads" the code in sets of three, and each set of three corresponds to an amino acid. The amino acids are linked up in order to form the protein.

Hope I helped.

2006-11-15 12:01:54 · answer #2 · answered by Kannan C 2 · 0 1

The shape of the mother and father proteins.

2006-11-15 11:49:09 · answer #3 · answered by Cardinal Rule 3 · 0 2

because of the fact ecology is the learn of organisms and thier reaction to atmosphere and each so often environments can impression the way issues evolve in accordance to the way it needs to evolve to proceed to exist

2016-10-15 14:42:06 · answer #4 · answered by sernas 4 · 0 0

amnio acids - im not sure

2006-11-15 11:50:39 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

the genes duh

2006-11-15 13:01:43 · answer #6 · answered by Uchihaitachi345 5 · 0 2

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