BIS 2A Lecture Notes - Lecture 17: Dna Replication, Dna Polymerase, Reverse Transcriptase

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Stack like rungs on a ladder, held together by hydrogen bonds. Hydrogen bond donors and acceptors hang off of backbone in the major and minor grooves. Proteins (+) can interact with dna in a very stable way. Variation allows for differences in environment to occur without causing mass extinction, variation --> evolution. Can work from 3" to 5", but needs to get hydroxyl from the primer and work in short sections. This is for the strand that is not being worked on form 5" to 3" by dna polymerase. Human dna polymerase works at 50 base pairs per second, but would need to work at around 70,000 base pairs per second to replicate in time. This is solved by having thousands of dna polymerases running at the same time. Consequences of mistakes range from nothing to fatal mutations. As it replicates, the strand enters an exonuclease that removes mismatched base pairs. About 20-50 bases are lost at the end.

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