MCB 2400 Lecture 2: Week 2 DNA Synthesis

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Alternating sugar and phosphate groups (between 3"c and 5"c) Nucleotides in a chain attached by covalent bonds (phosphodiester) Once and only once per cell cycle (avoid re-replication) Steps in dna replication: double helix unwinds at replication origin, hydrogen bonds break, new polynucleotide strand synthesis. Primase: adds short primer to template strand. Dna polymerase binds nucleotides to form new strands. Ligase: joins okazaki fragments and seals other nicks into sugar-phosphate backbone. Dna synthesis goes in the 5" -> 3" direction; requires a primer. Dna polymerase can only add dntps to a free 3" oh. Primase is a specialized form of rna polymerase that is only used in dna replication. Rna polymerase can start copying a template without a free 3 oh group. Primer consists of a short complementary rna stretch 10-12 nucleotides long. Allows for the amplification of a particular dna fragment. Primers are complementary to the ends of the target sequence on opposite strands.

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