BIOL 141 Lecture Notes - Lecture 18: Dna Polymerase I, Covalent Bond, Nucleic Acid Double Helix

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30 Mar 2018
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Must add a lot of energy to break a covalent bond. Use both water and enzyme (lower activation energy) When a bunch of transient bonds are stacked on top of each other, they are actually pretty powerful. Only snap new nucleotide onto 3" end : dna polyermase can"t do the opposite. Dna polymerase i: does have capability to add nucleotide to 5"end. Unzip dna both ways, described as semidiscontinuous, semiconservative. Each strand made using old strand as template. Add new dna using parent strands as template. Use radioactive isotopes to figure out how many nitrogenous bases are being generated. Can"t do this: in eukaryotes because they have linear chromosomes. All machinery there, dna wrenched open, replication all along chromosome until chromosome bubble units. Fork: anywhere where double stranded dna is becoming single stranded. Unlike atp, you cleave two phosphates, establish new phosphodiester bonds between the sugars and the phosphates.

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