MT-TE

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

SymbolMT-TE
Alt. symbolsMTTE
mitochondrially encoded tRNA glutamic acid
Identifiers
SymbolMT-TE
Alt. symbolsMTTE
NCBI gene4556
HGNC7479
RefSeqNC_001807
Other data
LocusChr. MT

Mitochondrially encoded tRNA glutamic acid also known as MT-TE is a transfer RNA which in humans is encoded by the mitochondrial MT-TE gene.[1] MT-TE is a small 69 nucleotide RNA (human mitochondrial map position 14674–14742) that transfers the amino acid glutamic acid to a growing polypeptide chain at the ribosome site of protein synthesis during translation.[2]

The MT-TE gene is located on the p arm of the mitochondrial DNA at position 12 and it spans 68 base pairs.[2] The structure of a tRNA molecule is a distinctive folded structure which contains three hairpin loops and resembles a three-leafed clover.[3]

Function

The MT-TE gene encodes for a transfer RNA (tRNA), which are chemical cousins of DNA responsible for assembling amino acids into functioning proteins. MT-TE codes for a specific tRNA called tRNAGlu. tRNAGlu is responsible for attaching to glutamic acid (Glu) and inserting it into the specific locations of the growing peptide during protein assembly. The tRNAGlu molecule is localized to the mitochondria, and is involved in the assembly of oxidative phosphorylation proteins.[4]

Clinical significance

References

Further reading

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