To
translate and form the chemical bonds in protein, the bacterial cell
deploys a piece of extremely complex equipment. The synthesis of
proteins is a two-stage process, since the protein sub-units are
assembled and polymerized, not directly on the gene, but on small
particles in the cytoplasm which serves as assembly lines. the deoxy-
ribonucleic acid text of the gene is therefore first transcribed into
another species of nucleic acid, the so-called ribonucleic acid, by
means of the same four-sign alphabet. This copy, called the 'messen-
ger', associates iwth the particles in the cytoplasm and brings them
the instructions for assembling the protein sub-units in the order
dictated by the nucleic-acid sequence.
Page 276
The logic of life : a history of heredity
by Jacob, François, 1920-2013
You do need an account to 'borrow' the book. And maybe archive.org is making very convincing edits to their scanned books but that seems wildly unlikely since most people won't investigate past the first internet rag that comes up on google.
To
translate and form the chemical bonds in protein, the bacterial cell
deploys a piece of extremely complex equipment. The synthesis of
proteins is a two-stage process, since the protein sub-units are
assembled and polymerized, not directly on the gene, but on small
particles in the cytoplasm which serves as assembly lines. the deoxy-
ribonucleic acid text of the gene is therefore first transcribed into
another species of nucleic acid, the so-called ribonucleic acid, by
means of the same four-sign alphabet. This copy, called the 'messen-
ger', associates iwth the particles in the cytoplasm and brings them
the instructions for assembling the protein sub-units in the order
dictated by the nucleic-acid sequence.
Page 276
The logic of life : a history of heredity
by Jacob, François, 1920-2013
Publication date 1976
https://archive.org/details/logicoflifehisto0000jaco_a3n9/page/276/mode/2up
You do need an account to 'borrow' the book. And maybe archive.org is making very convincing edits to their scanned books but that seems wildly unlikely since most people won't investigate past the first internet rag that comes up on google.