 
					
					
						Replication of DNA					
				 
				
					
						 المؤلف:  
						..................
						 المؤلف:  
						..................					
					
						 المصدر:  
						LibreTexts Project
						 المصدر:  
						LibreTexts Project					
					
						 الجزء والصفحة:  
						.................
						 الجزء والصفحة:  
						.................					
					
					
						 25-12-2019
						25-12-2019
					
					
						 2255
						2255					
				 
				
				
				
				
				
				
				
				
				
			 
			
			
				
				Replication of DNA
New cells are continuously forming in the body through the process of cell division. For this to happen, the DNA in a dividing cell must be copied in a process known as replication. The complementary base pairing of the double helix provides a ready model for how genetic replication occurs. If the two chains of the double helix are pulled apart, disrupting the hydrogen bonding between base pairs, each chain can act as a template, or pattern, for the synthesis of a new complementary DNA chain.
The nucleus contains all the necessary enzymes, proteins, and nucleotides required for this synthesis. A short segment of DNA is “unzipped,” so that the two strands in the segment are separated to serve as templates for new DNA. DNA polymerase, an enzyme, recognizes each base in a template strand and matches it to the complementary base in a free nucleotide. The enzyme then catalyzes the formation of an ester bond between the 5′ phosphate group of the nucleotide and the 3′ OH end of the new, growing DNA chain. In this way, each strand of the original DNA molecule is used to produce a duplicate of its former partner (Figure 1.1). Whatever information was encoded in the original DNA double helix is now contained in each replicate helix. When the cell divides, each daughter cell gets one of these replicates and thus all of the information that was originally possessed by the parent cell.

Figure 1.1 A Schematic Diagram of DNA Replication. DNA replication occurs by the sequential unzipping of segments of the double helix. Each new nucleotide is brought into position by DNA polymerase and is added to the growing strand by the formation of a phosphate ester bond. Thus, two double helixes form from one, and each consists of one old strand and one new strand, an outcome called semiconservative replications. (This representation is simplified; many more proteins are involved in replication.)
Example 1.1
A segment of one strand from a DNA molecule has the sequence 5′‑TCCATGAGTTGA‑3′. What is the sequence of nucleotides in the opposite, or complementary, DNA chain?
SOLUTION
Knowing that the two strands are antiparallel and that T base pairs with A, while C base pairs with G, the sequence of the complementary strand will be 3′‑AGGTACTCAACT‑5′ (can also be written as TCAACTCATGGA).
 
 
				
				
					
					 الاكثر قراءة في  الاحماض النووية
					 الاكثر قراءة في  الاحماض النووية					
					
				 
				
				
					
					 اخر الاخبار
						اخر الاخبار
					
					
						
							  اخبار العتبة العباسية المقدسة