DNA translation is very important because as a separate entity DNA has no function. The reason DNA is so important is because it is translated into proteins which the body can use to build larger structures. DNA is simply a template for these proteins. They are the instructions of the body but in order for the instructions to be important you have to have the means of executing the instructions and building the final product, a protein.
It is more important for DNA replication to be exact than for transcription or translation to be exact because replication products the master copy. Translation and transcription contains many possible codes that can correct for errors.
an error in DNA replication would affect many generations of cells
DNA condensation is used to block the transcription and translation of a number of genes. It is part of "epigenetics" by condensation of the DNA the polymerase can no longer bind.
Translation of the mRNA code is controlled by enzymes. DNA is not directly translated into proteins.
translation
Translation is to protein as transcription is to RNA. Transcription is the process by which RNA is synthesized from DNA, while translation is the process by which proteins are synthesized from RNA.
Not directly. It is mRNA that participates directly in translation in place of DNA. This has the advantage of allowing one gene to be expressed (its protein produced) many times at once, since multiple mRNA strands can be created from the DNA, and then all translated (over and over again) at the same time.
uhh i think polypeptides, i know they are for translation
It occurs when the DNA from the virus is injected into the host cell.
translation
DNA & RNA are used in making proteins during transcription and translation reactions .
DNA to proteinfirst you make mRNA from DNA in a process called transcription. next the mRNA in translated (translation) into proteins. look up those two terms and you'll have your answer.