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DNA Replication
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Why? When? DNA replicates using a semi-conservative mechanism.
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Leading strand- side of the DNA where replication is continuous.
Lagging strand- side of DNA where replication occurs in segments, creating Okazaki fragments.
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1. DNA helicase unwinds and then unzips the DNA, forming the replication fork.
Occurs at the origin – region of DNA with many A-T pairs Binding proteins attach to keep the DNA from coming back together
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2. RNA Primase attaches RNA primers to the DNA strands
DNA nucleotides need something to attach to
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3’ and 5’ explained The hydroxyl groups on the 5'- and 3'- carbons link to the phosphate groups to form the DNA backbone
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3. Leading Strand - DNA polymerase III attaches free nucleotides to pair with the DNA template.
Nucleotides are attached at the 3’ end of the sugar Continuous process
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- Numerous RNA primers are attached
3. Lagging Strand – DNA polymerase III attaches nucleotides in segments = Okazaki fragments - Numerous RNA primers are attached
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4. Exonucleases remove the RNA primers from the new DNA 5
4. Exonucleases remove the RNA primers from the new DNA 5. DNA Polymerase I attached DNA nucleotides to the areas where the RNA primers were attached
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6. DNA Ligase creates the covalent bonds between the sugars and phosphate groups along the sides of the DNA molecule
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Semi-conservative Each DNA molecule is half old DNA and half new DNA
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The end result of replication is two identical DNA molecules, each composed of half old DNA and half new DNA.
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