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rna polymerase
DNA Polymerases
One major rule of DNA polymerase is that it can only synthesize DNA in the 5' to 3' direction. This means that it adds nucleotides to the growing DNA strand by linking the 3' end of the incoming nucleotide with the 5' phosphate group of the previous nucleotide. Another rule is that DNA polymerase requires a primer, a short segment of RNA or DNA, to initiate DNA synthesis. The primer provides a starting point for DNA polymerase to begin adding nucleotides.
Helicase "zips" the newly formed DNA strand back together, linking the corresponding nucleotides back together.
Purines form hydrogen bonds to pyrimidines. Adenine pairs up with Thymine (in DNA) and Uracil (in RNA) and Guanine pairs with Cytosine. A-T pairing has 2 hydrogen bonds and C-G pairing has 3 hydrogen bonds.
it is a linking enzyme essential for DNA replication; catalyzes the covalent bonding of the 3' end of one DNA fragment to the 5' end of another DNA fragment.
In short, yes. Phosphodiester bonds are found in both DNA and RNA linking nucleotides between the 5' carbon atom and the 3' carbon of their respective sugar rings.
A DNA polymerase are enzymes that function in the replication and repair of DNA by catalyzing the linking of dATP, dCTP, dGTP, and dTTP in a specific order, using single-stranded DNA as a template.
ribosomes :)
You attach two thngs together
Foodweb
Amino Acids.