English, asked by tituuuuuiiii, 11 months ago

what is the central dogma of life?​

Answers

Answered by diyapandey
5
its about the important roles of messenger RNA, transfer RNA and ribosomal RNA in the protein-building process. But RNA does more than just build proteins. RNA has many jobs in the cell, including jobs that have been traditionally associated with DNA and proteins ...
Answered by Anonymous
2
\huge\bold{Central\: Dogma\: of\: Life}

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=>DNA is transcribed to RNA via complementary base pairing rules (but with U instead of T in the transcript)

=>The RNA transcript, specifically mRNA, is then translated to an amino acid polypeptide

=>Final folding and modifications of the polypeptide lead to functional proteins that actually do things in cells

This is known as the \small\bold{Central\: Dogma\: of\: Life}, which holds true for all organisms..

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hope it helps u

\huge\mathfrak\red{@itskrishna}
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