The 5 prime end of the strand.
ssb protein bind to the lagging strand as leading strand is invovled in dna replication and lagging strand is invovled in okazaki fragment formation
The mRNA strand!
a large protein that uses energy from H+ ions to bind ADP and a phosphate group together to produce ATP.
a large protein that uses energy from H+ ions to bind ADP and a phosphate group together to produce ATP.
Yes, ATP can bind to enzymes as a substrate or a cofactor to facilitate enzymatic reactions. The binding of ATP provides energy for the reaction to occur by transferring a phosphate group to the substrate molecule.
When double stranded DNA is unwound into single stranded DNA, single-strand binding proteins bind to each single stranded DNA strand and prevent the two strands from reattaching to each other, allowing DNA replication to continue.
a carboxylic acid group, or carboxyl group
role of ssb protein in dna replication is when the double stranded dna is brought in the single stranded form during replication the ssb bind to the single stranded dna so that the ss dna remain in the the single stranded form and when replication process is completed these protein get dissociated from the dna
The DNA polymerase enzyme synthesises the complementary DNA strand to a single stranded DNA strand (in vivo and in vitro). This often requires the presence of a 3' end for the polymerase enzyme to bind to before synthesis can begin. Taq polymerase (A DNA polymerase) is often used in PCR reactions to synthesise DNA in vitro using primers to provide a 3' end to bind to.
RNA is composed of a single strand of nucleotides made up of a ribose sugar, a phosphate group, and four nitrogenous bases: adenine (A), guanine (G), cytosine (C), and uracil (U). DNA is composed of two strands of nucleotides forming a double helix structure, made up of a deoxyribose sugar, a phosphate group, and four nitrogenous bases: adenine (A), thymine (T), cytosine (C), and guanine (G).
Triphosphate deoxyribonucleotides form hydrogen bonds with their complements in a DNA parent strand during transcription of the leading strand of DNA. Example Adenine nucleotides bind to thymine nucleotides Guanine nucleotides bind to Cytosine nucleotides
DNA is made of of two complimentary strands, the coding strand and the template strand. When DNA is transcribed (made into messenger RNA which can be converted by ribosomes into proteins) the DNA splits open and free nucleotide bases bind to the template strand. DNA is made of T/C/G/A and RNA is made of U/C/G/A nucleotide bases. G and C bind (they are said to be 'complimentary') A and T bind and in RNA U and A bind (so U replaces T.) The newly formed RNA strand (made on the template stand of DNA) is 'complimentary' to the template but the same as the coding strand of DNA. Hence the template is used to produce RNA which is a copy of the coding strand. Either strand of DNA can act as the template/coding strand. Hope that is a little bit helpful!