DNA remains in the nucleus.
Various DNA polymerases read the DNA template during replication of DNA. Various RNA polymerases read the DNA template during transcription.
DNA polymerase is the enzyme responsible for assembling DNA nucleotides into polynucleotides using an existing DNA template. It adds complementary nucleotides to the template strand during DNA replication.
A DNA molecule acts as a template during replication by serving as a guide for the synthesis of a new complementary strand of DNA. The template DNA strand is "read" by DNA polymerase, which adds new nucleotides following base pairing rules (A-T, C-G). This results in the formation of two identical DNA molecules.
The complementary strand of DNA to the template strand TACGGCTA would be ATGCCGAT.
During transcription, RNA polymerase binds to the DNA template strand and synthesizes a complementary RNA strand by adding nucleotides base-paired with the DNA template. The nucleotides are linked together, forming a single-stranded RNA molecule that is complementary to the DNA template. The process ends when RNA polymerase reaches a termination signal on the DNA template.
A strand of DNA
When the template strand of DNA is read from 3' to 5', DNA synthesis occurs in the 5' to 3' direction.
This is called transcription.
Yes, DNA serves as a template for the synthesis of RNA through the process of transcription. RNA then serves as a template for the synthesis of proteins through the process of translation.
Retro virus has reverse transcription in its replication cycle. In other words, rna is template for synthesis of dna. With dna virus, there is no reverse transcription in the replication cycle. Dna is the template for dna synthesis.
messenger RNA (mRNA) is the molecule that serves as the template for translation to occur. mRNA carries the genetic information from DNA to the ribosome, where it is translated into a sequence of amino acids to build a protein.
The template for semiconservative replication is the original DNA strand that serves as a guide for creating a new complementary strand. During DNA replication, each original parental strand acts as a template for the synthesis of a new daughter strand.