Difference between revisions of "Help:Terminators"

(Stem-loop type terminators)
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A terminator (short for "transcriptional terminator") is a stretch of DNA which halts the process of transcription (making RNA to protein).  Its sequence indicates the end of a functional operon (ie. a [[Help:Protein coding|coding region]] attached to a regulatory region)
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A terminator (short for "transcriptional terminator") is a stretch of DNA which halts the process of transcription (making RNA to protein).   
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==Stem-loop type terminators==
 
==Stem-loop type terminators==

Revision as of 14:22, 29 June 2006

Part icon terminator.png Browse terminator parts!


A terminator (short for "transcriptional terminator") is a stretch of DNA which halts the process of transcription (making RNA to protein).


Stem-loop type terminators

An example of a stem-loop coding region (location indicated by the hairpin picture) in Part:BBa_B0011

In our prokaryotic biobricks, host cells, these terminator parts are often palindromic (same sequence backwards and forwards) and form a stem-loop structure by folding back on itself and terminates transcription in this way.
One example of a biobrick which uses this method is the terminator Part:BBa_B0011, which has the palindromic sequence "aaaagccagattattaatccggctttt"

Poly-A tails

In eukaryotic hosts such as yeast, a string of adenosine ("A") nucleotides is the primary method through which termination of transcription occurs. This is mediated by exonucleases (enzymes which cut at this recognition sequence). A popular "poly-A" motif is "AAUAAA".

Rho type terminators

Another method which cells use to terminate a sequence is through the action of the Rho protein.