Biology, asked by saronjihn, 4 months ago

How is hn RNA transformed by splicing in Eukaryotes? ​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
3

Answer:

During splicing, introns (non-coding regions) are removed and exons (coding regions) are joined together. ... For those eukaryotic genes that contain introns, splicing is usually required in order to create an mRNA molecule that can be translated into protein.

Answered by Braɪnlyємρєяσя
1

Explanation:

Capping at the 5′end: Addition of guanosine triphosphate to the 5′end of hnRNA.

Tailing at the 3′end: Addition of 200–300 adenylate residues at the 3′end of hnRNA.

Splicing: Removal of introns and joining the exon segments of the transcript.

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