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Question: 1 / 410
What does the presence of adenine nucleotides in a Rho-independent terminator indicate?
They are not transcribed
They are transcribed into uracil
The presence of adenine nucleotides in a Rho-independent terminator indicates that they are transcribed into uracil. In prokaryotic transcription, Rho-independent terminators often contain a sequence rich in adenine (A) residues on the DNA strand, which serves to form a stable RNA structure upon transcription. As RNA polymerase transcribes this region, the adenine residues are paired with uracil residues in the RNA transcript, resulting in a sequence where adenine in DNA translates to uracil in RNA.
This transcription process plays a critical role in terminating transcription because the formation of a hairpin loop structure, typically followed by this stretch of adenines, destabilizes the transcription complex, leading to the release of the RNA transcript. The transcription of A's in the terminator helps in executing this termination process effectively by interacting with the polymerase and ensuring the RNA synthesis stops at the correct point.
Get further explanation with Examzify DeepDiveBetaThey signal the beginning of transcription
They enhance promoter recognition