DNA replication is described as semi-conservative. The reason is because semi-conservative replication would produce two copies that each contained one of the original strands and one entirely new strand.
Semi-conservative DNA replication means that the DNA molecule that results contains one original strand of DNA and one new strand of DNA.
DNA Replication is semi-conservative because each DNA molecule is composed of 1 old strand and 1 new strand
When DNA is replicated, the new double-strand contains one old strand and one new strand. This means that one of the old strands has been conserved, making DNA replication semi-conservative.
I'm not an expert on this subject but as I've learned, DNA is split into two replication forks where the complimentary base pairs and other backbones are added on, so ideally it would be 50% of the original strand in each daughter strand.
the original strand serves as a temple for the new molecule.
Semi conservative replication prevents mutations during DNA replication because it produces 2 copies that each contained 1 of the original strands and 1 entirely new strand.
Semi-conservative DNA replication means that the DNA molecule that results contains one original strand of DNA and one new strand of DNA.
Polymerase
The original DNA molecule is the template for the new DNA molecules.
The original DNA molecule is the template for the new DNA molecules.
DNA Replication is semi-conservative because each DNA molecule is composed of 1 old strand and 1 new strand
When DNA is replicated, the new double-strand contains one old strand and one new strand. This means that one of the old strands has been conserved, making DNA replication semi-conservative.
DNA replication is said to be 'semi-conservative' because the two new daughter DNA molecules are "Half old" and "Half new". Half the original DNA molecule is saved, or conserved in the daughter molecules.
I think there is a mistake in the question. The DNA replication is said to be semi-conservative because during DNA replication one stand will be parental and the other will be newly formed. This happens due to the complimentary base pairing.
One strand is new, and one is old.
I'm not an expert on this subject but as I've learned, DNA is split into two replication forks where the complimentary base pairs and other backbones are added on, so ideally it would be 50% of the original strand in each daughter strand.
the original strand serves as a temple for the new molecule.