what is splicing?why is it necessary in eukaryotes cells?
Answers
Answered by
8
In molecelleur bioligy, splicing is the editing of the nascent precursor messanger RNA transcript into mature spilcing. After splicing introns are remved. And exons are joined together.
However in eukaryotes before the RNA can be translated into protiens non coding of the sequence. Called introns must be removed and protien coding called exons joined by RNA splicing to produce mature RNA.
HOPE IT HELP U.. PLZ MARK IT AS A BRAINLIEST.
However in eukaryotes before the RNA can be translated into protiens non coding of the sequence. Called introns must be removed and protien coding called exons joined by RNA splicing to produce mature RNA.
HOPE IT HELP U.. PLZ MARK IT AS A BRAINLIEST.
Answered by
0
Explanation:
RNA splicing is a form of RNA processing in which a newly transcripted precursor messenger RNA (pre-mRNA) is transformed into a mature messenger RNA (mRNA).
It is necessary in eukaryotic cells because eukaryotic genes contain non coding regions (known as introns) in between coding regions (known as exons). So to make a functional protein from the mRNA, the introns must be removed and this is done by splicing
hope this helps you ☺️
Similar questions