THE MOLECULAR BASIS OF INHERITANCE
DNA REPLICATION
Question
[CLICK ON ANY CHOICE TO KNOW THE RIGHT ANSWER]
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Topoisomerase uncoils the DNA
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DNA polymerase adds new nucleotides
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Ligase seals the DNA fragments
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Primase adds primers
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Detailed explanation-1: -During elongation, an enzyme called DNA polymerase adds DNA nucleotides to the 3′ end of the template. Because DNA polymerase can only add new nucleotides at the end of a backbone, a primer sequence, which provides this starting point, is added with complementary RNA nucleotides.
Detailed explanation-2: -DNA polymerases can only add nucleotides to the 3’ end of an existing DNA strand. (They use the free-OH group found at the 3’ end as a “hook, ” adding a nucleotide to this group in the polymerization reaction.)
Detailed explanation-3: -DNA polymerase III starts adding nucleotides to the 3’-OH end of the primer. Elongation of both the lagging and the leading strand continues. RNA primers are removed by exonuclease activity.
Detailed explanation-4: -Step 4: Termination Once both the continuous and discontinuous strands are formed, an enzyme called exonuclease removes all RNA primers from the original strands. These primers are then replaced with appropriate bases. Another exonuclease “proofreads” the newly formed DNA to check, remove and replace any errors.
Detailed explanation-5: -DNA polymerase IV (pol IV) is one of three specialised DNA polymerases called into action during the SOS response to help cells tolerate certain types of DNA damage. The canonical view in the field is that pol IV primarily acts at replisomes that have stalled on the damaged DNA template.