The helicase enzymes are used to unzip DNA. There are 31 specific DNA helicases. There are 95 unique helicases in the human genome.
the one that breaks it is called Helicase and the one that adds it is called Polymerase.
one of them is heliocase. it 'unzips' the DNA strand. You can always remember this because it's in a popular joke: Q. Why is the enzyme heliocase a lot like a teenage boy? A. They both want to unzip your jeans (genes) !!!!!
DNA ligase is a very specific enzyme used in microbiology. The enzyme is used to help join DNA strands together and is used for DNA replication and repair.
DNA polymerase
DNA polymerase
Helicase is what will "unzip" the DNA.
The protein uncoils the helix and "unzip" the bases
If I were an enzyme, I'd be DNA helicase so I could unzip your genes.
the one that breaks it is called Helicase and the one that adds it is called Polymerase.
one of them is heliocase. it 'unzips' the DNA strand. You can always remember this because it's in a popular joke: Q. Why is the enzyme heliocase a lot like a teenage boy? A. They both want to unzip your jeans (genes) !!!!!
Reverse transcriptase is the enzyme used to synthesize DNA from mRNA.
DNA ligase is a very specific enzyme used in microbiology. The enzyme is used to help join DNA strands together and is used for DNA replication and repair.
DNA Polymerase
This is the process of DNA replication. A DNA strand in the nucleus of a cell, starts off by being "unzipped" by helicase (an enzyme). Then another enzyme, DNA polymerase matches the nitrogen bases (which are freely floating in the nucleus), of each half with their matches, this forms two identical strands, of DNA.
The hydrogen bonds are broken in order to unzip the DNA strand. This all occurs during the DNA replication process.
restriction enzymes are used to cut DNA.
DNA polymerase