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Here are a few good ones:
1. Lew-Port's Biology Place (originally here) - a really great, simple animation of the process.
2. Wisc-Online - another really good, simple animation
3. yourgenome.org - DNA to protein (from a computer click on the flash link about halfway down) - we haven't talked about introns and exons yet, but the transcription/translation animations are pretty cool.
4. John Kyrk's Transcription and Translation - if you want a view of the molecules in action as molecules, this is the place to go.
5. Learn.Genetics - practice transcription and translation
6. Interactive Concepts in Biochemistry - more complicated than today's talk or the ones above, but a solid animation.
If you're just curious about different types of proteins, this part of the Learn.Genetics site is amazing (well it's all just amazing. Period. Seriously. Bookmark it). Just want to know more about DNA, RNA, genes, proteins, and the central dogma? THIS IS A GOLDMINE***
* Yeah, I know it's still not fully explained, but you know a whole lot more now. It's tempting to think of your life as "Before Protein Synthesis" and "After Protein Synthesis." There's a support group for that. We meet in my room during tutorials. Stop by.
**Sometimes looking at too many different things can be confusing, but if you understand the big ideas behind each of the models then it can be very beneficial to see it from as many different perspectives as possible.
***I told you to bookmark it.
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