Submitted by LumpyEducation2588 t3_10pxtyv in explainlikeimfive
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ScienceIsSexy420 t1_j6mv7wj wrote
RNA is not the copy machine, RNA is the copy that the machine makes! The copy machine is the enzyme RNA polymerase ;)
Minimum_Box4491 t1_j6mpdvz wrote
To keep it short:
DNA contains instructions to make proteins. RNA carries these instructions to the protein factories (called “ribosomes”). DNA is in the famous shape of a double-helix. Imagine only one side/one half of that - and you have the shape of RNA, which is a single strand.
And all this happens at a micro-cellular level.
[deleted] t1_j6nh29w wrote
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explainlikeimfive-ModTeam t1_j6nmodw wrote
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FizzyShin t1_j6o19fu wrote
DNA is the blueprint for making your proteins. RNA is a work order. It is a copy of a portion of the blueprint that is sent off to factory to get the protein made.
DiamondIceNS t1_j6o9dyh wrote
DNA is the master copy. In most circumstances you only want one copy of it sitting around at any given time. It has developed to become sturdy and resilient to damage, and it is always under constant repair and error correction. It is also very long, and has the ability to be spun up into condensed packages for deep storage when not in use.
RNA is basically just a photocopy of DNA. Stuff all around the cell needs to use the DNA as instructions to do their tasks, but not everything can be swarming around the DNA reading it all at once. Instead, special proteins periodically "scan" the DNA and "photocopy" it to RNA. RNA is built similarly to DNA, but it is very short, and its structure makes it much more temporary. It lasts just long enough to leave the place where the DNA is stored, make it out to something that will read its bite-sized instruction, and then it disintegrates back into pieces that can be recycled to make new strands of RNA.
You can think of it like having one master copy of a very fancy and expensive book, that everyone in a company needs to read from from time to time. But instead of letting everyone mass around the book every time they need something, you have some employees occasionally flip to certain pages and photocopy them, and they send out photocopies to everyone. These photocopies are read a few times, thrown away, and then the paper is recycled.
[deleted] t1_j6mrpga wrote
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Seygantte t1_j6mzhnj wrote
Saying RNA is correctly termed mRNA is like saying that cutlery is correctly terms forks. There are several varieties of RNA of which mRNA is just one. Others include ribosomal RNA (rRNA) which makes up part of the ribosome, and transfer RNA (tRNA) which is a links peptides to mRNA during protein synthesis.
frustrated_staff t1_j6mp9h3 wrote
The ELI5 answer is that DNA is the architect and RNA is the builder, but to be a little above ELI5. DNA is the blueprint from which everything is copied from or to. RNA is the copy machine. When DNA needs to copied, it's RNA that comes in and attaches to the open DNA molecule (one side only) matching it's pairs to the DNA before moving off. Once in place, bits and pieces attach to the RNA until the DNA strand is complete and BOOM: new DNA.