In this privately circulated paper, Crick and Brenner refined Crick's original theory that amino acids are captured and assembled into a polypeptide chain by adaptor molecules according to instructions provided by messenger RNA. The adaptor molecules consisted of soluble RNA (called transfer RNA, or tRNA by the mid-1960s) and protein.. In the second part of the paper Crick and Brenner tried to resolve complications that arose from the assumption, then widely held, that ribosomal RNA was the messenger. Especially puzzling was the fact that ribosomal RNA appeared in only two lengths, whereas the polypeptide chains for which RNA coded were of widely varying lengths. Within two years, this complication was resolved when it became clear that the ribosome was an inert head for reading off the sequence of bases on messenger RNA, which in turn was identified as its own distinct form of RNA.
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