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Transfer RNA and Aminoacylation

The adaptor molecules that physically link codons to amino acids, and the synthetases that charge each tRNA with its correct amino acid.

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Definition

Transfer RNAs are small folded RNAs that carry a specific amino acid and bear an anticodon complementary to an mRNA codon; aminoacylation (charging) is the synthetase-catalysed attachment of the correct amino acid to its cognate tRNA, establishing the physical link between code and protein.

Scope

This topic covers transfer RNA structure — the cloverleaf and L-shaped fold, the anticodon, and the amino-acid acceptor end — and the aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases that attach the correct amino acid to each tRNA. It addresses how charging fidelity is achieved, including proofreading by synthetases, and how the anticodon enforces correct decoding. The ribosome's use of charged tRNAs is treated in companion topics.

Core questions

  • What is the structure of a tRNA and how does it serve as an adaptor?
  • How does an aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase attach the right amino acid to the right tRNA?
  • How is charging accuracy maintained, given chemically similar amino acids?
  • How does the anticodon ensure correct codon recognition during translation?

Key theories

Adaptor hypothesis
Crick proposed that small adaptor molecules carry amino acids and recognise codons by base pairing; transfer RNAs are these adaptors, decoupling the chemistry of amino acids from the language of nucleic acids.
Synthetase-enforced charging fidelity
Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases recognise both their amino acid and their cognate tRNA, and many use editing (proofreading) steps to hydrolyse mischarged products, ensuring that the genetic code is read correctly at the charging step.

Mechanisms

A transfer RNA folds into a compact L shape that presents an anticodon at one end and the amino-acid acceptor end at the other. An aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase activates its specific amino acid with ATP and transfers it to the 3' end of the matching tRNA; many synthetases possess a separate editing site that hydrolyses incorrectly attached amino acids, sharpening fidelity. During translation, the charged tRNA's anticodon pairs with the mRNA codon in the ribosomal decoding centre, delivering the encoded amino acid.

Clinical relevance

Mutations affecting tRNAs or synthetases cause a range of inherited disorders, and the charging step is studied for engineering expanded genetic codes; provided as significance, not clinical guidance.

History

Crick's adaptor hypothesis predicted tRNA before its biochemical identification; Holley determined the first complete tRNA sequence in the mid-1960s, and the synthetases and their editing activities were characterised thereafter, fixing the role of charged tRNAs in decoding.

Key figures

  • Francis Crick
  • Robert Holley
  • Paul Zamecnik

Related topics

Seminal works

  • crick1970
  • watson2013

Frequently asked questions

What does it mean to 'charge' a tRNA?
To attach the correct amino acid to it; a charged, or aminoacylated, tRNA carries the amino acid specified by the codon its anticodon recognises.
How do cells avoid putting the wrong amino acid on a tRNA?
Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases recognise both the amino acid and the tRNA, and many have an editing site that destroys incorrectly attached amino acids.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts