in a direction opposite to that of the replication fork
In the same directions of the replication fork
DNA replication takes place in NUCLEUS
No, DNA replication does not take place in the same direction along both strands of the DNA. It occurs in opposite directions on the two strands, known as the leading and lagging strands.
At the beginning of DNA replication there are two strands of DNA nucleotides.
DNA replication takes place in the nucleus of a cell.
The DNA double helix unwinds, & the two separated strands each serve as a template for a complementary strand to be synthesised
DNA replication occurs in the nucleus of an animal cell. This process involves the DNA molecule unwinding to form a replication fork, where enzymes work to create new strands of DNA complementary to the existing strands.
DNA replication takes place in the nucleus of human cells.
Replication forks tend to unwind the DNA helix, separate the double strands, and synthesize new strands of DNA in opposite directions. They are formed during DNA replication and move along the DNA template strands as replication progresses.
Genetic replication involves two DNA strands.
The replication fork is a structure formed during DNA replication where the parental DNA strands are separated and new complementary strands are synthesized. It allows for the simultaneous synthesis of two new DNA strands in opposite directions. The replication fork moves along the DNA strand as replication proceeds.
DNA replication is a process during which DNA double helix opens like a zipper , new nucleotides are added along both strands of DNA by enzyme DNA polmerase and at last two molecules of DNA are formed. It takes place in S phase of interphase .