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Answers:

a) From the mRNA you can learn the amino acid sequence of the protein very quickly. You absolutely cannot (yet) learn the function of the protein from that sequence - normally, people just do comparisons with proteins whose functions ARE known. Oftentimes in enzymes there are "domains" or little functional regions that stay consistent over long periods of time, so that's a good way to assign function (given knowledge of other proteins in the same family)

b) Yep. Every virus at some point in their lifecycle use mRNA. You can just sequence the virus and get all that data (I've done that on SARS-COV-2, it's honestly pretty easy). Then you just do homology alignment (as stated above) and you can figure out approximately what each gene does.

The problem of de-novo protein prediction is ONE OF THE HARDEST PROBLEMS IN BIOTECH, but just like getting amino acid sequence, doing homology searches, sequencing viruses, etc, is basic biotech and I'd expect an eager high schooler or undergrad to be able to do them.




Thanks !




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