Both DNA polymerase and Helicase are:
Enzymes
There are 4, Helicase, Primase, DNA ligase and DNA polymerase.
Helicase is the enzymes that splits the double helix into two separate strands, and DNA Polymerase (as opposed to RNA Polymerase) joins the nucleotides together in the new strands being created.
C) DNA Polymerase ; )
DNA helicase is the enzyme that aids DNA in unzipping during transcription.
The two proteins used during DNA replication are DNA polymerase and DNA helicase. DNA polymerase adds nucleotides to the growing DNA strand, while DNA helicase unwinds the double helix structure of DNA to expose the template strands for replication.
The two main ones are DNA-polymerase and helicase
Helicase and DNA polymerase
Two of the enzymes involved in DNA replication are helicase and DNA polymerase. Helicase unwinds the DNA strand and DNA polymerase makes a copy.
There are 4, Helicase, Primase, DNA ligase and DNA polymerase.
DNA polymerase III DNA polymerase I DNA Ligase DNA Helicase
the one that breaks it is called Helicase and the one that adds it is called Polymerase.
DNA Helicase - responsible for separating the two stands DNA Polymerase - responsible for catalyzing the addition of bases to the new strand DNA Ligase - responsible for sealing fragments
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. Apex
DNA helicase
DNA polymerase attaches (polymerizes) nucleotides together to make polynucleotides using a strand of DNA that has already been unzipped by DNA helicase.
Helicase is the enzymes that splits the double helix into two separate strands, and DNA Polymerase (as opposed to RNA Polymerase) joins the nucleotides together in the new strands being created.