Examples of selenocysteine in the following topics:
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- Selenocysteine and pyrrolysine are not encoded by the universal genetic code.
- The remaining two, selenocysteine and pyrrolysine, are incorporated into proteins by unique synthetic mechanisms.
- Selenocysteine is incorporated when the mRNA being translated includes a SECIS element, which causes the UGA codon to encode selenocysteine instead of a stop codon.
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- The stop codon UGA is sometimes used to encode a 21st amino acid called selenocysteine (Sec), but only if the mRNA additionally contains a specific sequence of nucleotides called a selenocysteine insertion sequence (SECIS).
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- The 21st amino acid, not shown here, is selenocysteine, with an R group of -CH2-SeH.
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- Of the three termination codons, one (UGA) can also be used to encode the 21st amino acid, selenocysteine, but only if the mRNA contains a specific sequence of nucleotides known as a SECIS sequence.