mRNA (messenger RNA)

mRNA, or messenger RNA, is a type of RNA that carries genetic information from DNA to the ribosome, where it serves as a template for protein synthesis.


🔑 Definition:

mRNA (messenger RNA) is a single-stranded RNA molecule transcribed from a DNA gene that contains the instructions to build a specific protein.


⚙️ What mRNA Does:

  1. Transcription (in the nucleus)
    • DNA is used as a template to make an mRNA strand.
    • This process is carried out by RNA polymerase II.
    • The mRNA contains codons — sequences of three nucleotides that each specify an amino acid.
  2. Processing (in eukaryotes)
    Before leaving the nucleus, the mRNA is:
    • Capped at the 5’ end (for stability and ribosome recognition)
    • Spliced (introns are removed, exons joined)
    • Polyadenylated at the 3’ end (poly-A tail for stability)
  3. Translation (in the cytoplasm)
    • The mRNA travels to the ribosome.
    • Ribosomes “read” the mRNA codons and assemble amino acids in the correct order to make a protein.

🧪 Key Features of mRNA:

FeatureRole
CodonsEach 3-base codon codes for 1 amino acid
5’ capHelps ribosome recognize and bind the mRNA
Poly-A tailProtects mRNA from degradation
UTRs(Untranslated regions) regulate translation efficiency

🧠 Why mRNA Is Important:

AreaImportance
Protein productionAll cellular proteins are made by translating mRNA
Gene expressionmRNA levels reflect how active a gene is
Medical researchmRNA is a tool in vaccines, cancer therapy, and gene therapy
mRNA vaccines(e.g., COVID-19 vaccines) deliver synthetic mRNA to instruct cells to make a harmless viral protein, triggering an immune response

📌 Summary:

mRNA is the messenger molecule that carries genetic instructions from DNA to the ribosome, where proteins are made. It’s central to how genes are expressed and how the body builds everything from enzymes to structural components.