A duplicate molecule.
The cell disappears...
The cell disappears...
Four.
False: DNA replication starts at origins of replication which can be anywhere on the DNA molecule. Replication is taking place at multiple origins at the same time.
One point on the DNA Molecule Hope This Helps!
Four copies of a DNA molecule result from two replications of a single DNA molecule. This is because each replication results in two identical daughter molecules.
The term that describes the process where half of the old DNA molecule is retained in the new DNA molecule during DNA replication is known as semi-conservative replication. This means that each new DNA molecule formed consists of one original strand and one newly synthesized complementary strand.
Only one, providing it is repeatable.One! Replication of the experiment result confirms the result in the scientific community.
During DNA replication the two strands of the DNA helix split apart and the ribosome reads off the template strand producing an exact copy of this strand. Then RNA polymerase base pairs both of the strands, producing 2 semi-conservative strands.
After DNA replication, each new molecule has one strand of the original DNA molecule and the other strand is composed of new nucleic acids. This is due to the semi-conservative replication of DNA.
Each DNA molecule formed is half new, with one strand coming from the original DNA molecule and the other newly synthesized during replication. This process ensures that each new DNA molecule contains one original strand to serve as a template for accurate replication.
What do you mean by one area? If by one area you mean does it start at one area then stop and continue on another area then no, DNA replication is continuous and when it takes place it is the most important thing going on in the cell. The cells resources are directed at this process * DNA replication means copying the entire DNA molecule, so it involves the entire molecule, but not all at the same time. In bacteria (prokaryotic cells) replication begins at one point in the molecule and continues all the way round the circular molecule.Beginning at just one place would take too long in eukaryotic cells; someone has calculated that our longest chromosomes would take about a fortnight to replicate, and we cannot wait that long! So replication begins at a number of sites along the length of the DNA molecule. At each replication site, as the DNA strands are separated there is a bulge in the molecule called a replication bubble. As replication proceeds these bubbles become longer, and eventually they merge into one another and the job is done.