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Multiple Choice
What happens when a stop codon is encountered in the mRNA during translation?
A
The ribosome continues to add amino acids to the polypeptide chain.
B
The ribosome releases the polypeptide chain and translation terminates.
C
The ribosome recruits a new tRNA to continue translation.
D
The ribosome skips the stop codon and continues translation.
Verified step by step guidance
1
Understand the role of mRNA in translation: mRNA carries the genetic information from DNA to the ribosome, where it is translated into a polypeptide chain.
Learn about codons: Codons are sequences of three nucleotides on the mRNA that correspond to specific amino acids or signal termination of translation.
Identify the stop codons: In mRNA, there are three stop codons (UAA, UAG, UGA) that do not code for any amino acids but signal the end of translation.
Explore the function of stop codons: When a stop codon is encountered, it signals the ribosome to terminate translation, releasing the newly synthesized polypeptide chain.
Understand the termination process: Release factors bind to the ribosome when a stop codon is reached, facilitating the release of the polypeptide chain and disassembly of the translation complex.