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BIOLOGY 12 DNA Replication
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Genetic Information the order of the nucleotide bases in the DNA makes the genetic code a gene is a sequence of bases along a DNA molecules each sequence codes for a protein, which in turn codes for a function or a trait
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DNA Replication Why does DNA have to replicate? because when cells divide (reproduce), the new cells produced must have a full set of genes to function properly each DNA strand acts as a template to build a complementary strand
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DNA Replication DNA is always synthesized in the 5’ to 3’ direction (the new strand starts at 5’) replication is semiconservative – each new DNA molecule consists of one parent strand and one new strand replication does not have parent strands together and new strands together
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Replication Enzymes DNA helicase – unwinds the double helix by breaking the hydrogen bonds DNA polymerase III – responsible for synthesizing new DNA strands (adds the bases) RNA primase – binds to lagging strand and lays a primer, allows polymerase to lay in 5’ to 3’ direction
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Replication Enzymes DNA polymerase I – replaces nucleotides from the primer on the lagging strand DNA ligase – joins DNA okazaki fragments together (on the lagging strand) Exonuclease – molecular “spellchecker” that repairs mistakes made during replication DNA polymerase I and DNA polymerase III are exonucleases; they also act as spellcheckers
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DNA Replication synthesis of the new strand is always 5’ to 3’
the new strand that uses the 3’ to 5’ parent strand as a template is the leading strand and is built continuously towards the replication fork
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DNA Replication the lagging strand is built discontinuously is short fragments in the opposite direction the short fragments of DNA along the lagging strand are called Okazaki Fragments
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DNA Replication 1. a protein binds to the DNA at the origins 2. - DNA helicase breaks the hydrogen bonds between the bases - the double helix begins to unzip - the junction where the strands are still joined is called the replication fork
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DNA Replication Leading Strand 3. as the nucleotides separate, DNA polymerase III binds to the parent strand 4. - the enzyme moves along the chain, bonding new nucleotides to the nucleotides of the parent strand - base pairing must occur, so the new chain is a complement to the parent chain
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DNA Replication Lagging Strand 3. RNA primase lays a primer on the lagging strand 4. - DNA polymerase III can now bind to the parent strand and add nucleotides in the 5’ to 3’ direction - DNA polymerase I then replaces the primer - DNA ligase joins the Okazaki fragments into one strand by a phosphodiester bond
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DNA Replication 5. exonuclease proof reads the new strands to ensure no mistakes occurred 6. - the nucleotides in the chains bond together - the chains will automatically twist into a helix
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DNA Replication each new DNA molecule consists of one parent and one new strand they are exact replicas of the parent molecule
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See figure on page 222
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DNA Replication Process
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