MT-TS1 Gene
mitochondrially encoded tRNA-Ser (UCN) 1
ALIAS SYMBOLS
TRNS1
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Sign InDescription
The MT-TS1 gene provides instructions for making a particular type of RNA, a molecule that is a chemical cousin of DNA. This type of RNA, called transfer RNA (tRNA), helps assemble protein building blocks known as amino acids into full-length, functioning proteins. The MT-TS1 gene provides instructions for a specific form of tRNA that is designated as tRNASer(UCN). During protein assembly, this molecule attaches to a particular amino acid, serine (Ser), and inserts it into the appropriate locations in the growing protein.
The tRNASer(UCN) molecule is present in cellular structures called mitochondria. These structures convert energy from food into a form that cells can use. Through a process called oxidative phosphorylation, mitochondria use oxygen, simple sugars, and fatty acids to create adenosine triphosphate (ATP), the cell's main energy source. The tRNASer(UCN) molecule is involved in the assembly of proteins that carry out oxidative phosphorylation.
CHROMOSOME
mitochondria
LOCATION
LOCUS TYPE
RNA, transfer
VARIANTS
0
Phenotypes
External Links
HGNC
Ensembl
NCBI
OMIM