BIOSC-116 Lecture Notes - Lecture 9: Messenger Rna, Start Codon, Dna Replication

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Describe the process of dna replication and explain its significance. The significance of the ability of dna to replicate itself exactly, is that identical copies of that gene can be made. Dna replication is made possible because the molecule is a double helix, and the nitrogenous bases only pair complementary. The steps of dna replication: the dna double helix unwinds at one end. This is caused by an enzyme called helicase: dna unzips and the two strands become separate. The weak hydrogen bonds break between the complementary bases of the nucleotides in opposite strands, exposing the nucleotide bases: nucleotides are added to each single strand. Free nucleotides floating in the nucleoplasm attach to exposed bases, a t and c g through dna polymerase, to ensure replication is exact. Outline, using a simple model, the process by which dna controls the production of polypeptides. Dna: a gene that contains a sequence of bases to code for a protein.

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