dna is that because the structures of what is does.
and how it reacts
SSB (single-strand binding) protein prevents the reannealing of DNA during replication by binding to single-stranded DNA, keeping the strands separated and accessible for replication machinery to function.
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.
What prevents the wrong nucleotide from being added to the new strand during DNA replication? DNA polymerase 3 and DNA polymerase 1 can become what is known as exonucleases. an exonuclease can go back and "proofread" the replicated DNA and if there is a mistake, then everything beyond that incorrect nucleotide is removed and the DNA polymerase 3 will re-replicate from the bad point on. the protein p53 holds the cell in the G1 and S phase of replication which allows more time for proof reading the replicated DNA
Mutations
DNA polymerase is the enzyme responsible for attaching free floating nucleotides to an open strand of DNA during replication. It adds nucleotides in a specific order dictated by the template DNA strand.
Normal chromosome replication results in two identical copies of the original chromosome, each with one chromatid. This process ensures that each daughter cell receives a complete set of chromosomes during cell division.
A cell's DNA is copied during replication.
Nucleoside analogs interfere with viral replication by being incorporated into viral DNA or RNA during replication, which disrupts the normal functioning of the virus. This disruption prevents the virus from replicating efficiently and ultimately leads to its inhibition.
I can find no reference to a molecule used in "pf" replication. Do you have another term in mind? Please resubmit your question if you do.
The difference between between replication and replication is that replication is the series of copies, and repetition is the series of repeats.
The enzyme responsible for attaching nucleotides together by forming phosphodiester bonds during DNA replication is DNA polymerase. DNA polymerase catalyzes the addition of nucleotides to the growing DNA strand using a template strand as a guide.
DNA polymerase III adds nucleotides during DNA replication by attaching them to the growing DNA strand in a specific order that matches the complementary bases on the template strand. This enzyme catalyzes the formation of phosphodiester bonds between the nucleotides, creating a new strand of DNA that is identical to the original template strand.