Ribosome consists of large and small subunits joined together with inter subunit bridges.
The fingers quested within the circuitry, dislodging certain fastenings, until a small subunit was loose.
The small subunit has a 3-layer beta/beta/alpha structure, and is thought to be mobile in most proteins that carry it.
This can inhibit the scanning process of the small ribosomal subunit, if not unwound.
Alternatively spliced transcripts have been found for this locus that encode the large and small subunits.
Since Var1 helps form the small subunit of the ribosome, its significance become apparent in translation and cell survival.
The shape of the small subunit can be subdivided into two large segments, the head and the body.
It interacts with both the large and small subunits of the ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase.
A macromolecule is a very large molecule commonly created by polymerization of smaller subunits.
It's actually made up of almost 32,000 small subunits.