ENG BE 209 Chapter 6: Chapter 6 Notes

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Dna replication: the duplication process that must occur before a cell can produce two genetically identical daughter cells. Maintaining order in a cell also requires the continual surveillance and repair of its genetic information. Each strand of dna can act as a template for the synthesis of a new complementary strand. Enables a cell to copy, or replicate, its genes before passing them on to its decedents. Accomplished by a cluster of proteins forming a replication machine. Dna replication: produces two complete double helices from the original dna molecule, each new dna helix identical in nucleotide sequence to the parental dna double helix. Semiconservative: the daughter dna double helices ends up with one of the original (old) strands plus one strand that is completely new. Initiator proteins bind to the dna and pry the two strands apart, breaking the hydrogen bonds. Collectively, hydrogen bonds make dna very stable.

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