The answer to this question is simple. A mutation would occur. Believe it or not, mutations occur in your body all the time. Even so, most mutations are harmless, because 97% of DNA is absolutely useless, and does nothing in your body.
Yes, DNA polymerase is a protein.
The enzyme that transcribes the DNA into RNA is called RNA polymerase.
Two of the enzymes involved in DNA replication are helicase and DNA polymerase. Helicase unwinds the DNA strand and DNA polymerase makes a copy.
DNA polymerase is responsible for synthesizing new DNA strands during DNA replication, while RNA polymerase is responsible for transcribing DNA into RNA. DNA polymerase adds nucleotides to the growing DNA strand, ensuring accurate replication of genetic information. RNA polymerase reads the DNA template and synthesizes a complementary RNA strand. Overall, DNA polymerase is involved in DNA replication, while RNA polymerase is involved in transcription.
DNA polymerase matches the bases on the parent strand.
RNA polymerase is the enzyme that makes mRNA from a strand of DNA.
When a mistake happens in the process of copying DNA, the result is called a Mutation.
DNA Polymerase is the enzyme which adds new nucleotides during replication.
DNA polymerase replicated DNA. RNA polymerase creates mRNA to be used in protein synthesis. RNA polymerase does not replicated DNA.
Yes, DNA polymerase is a protein.
Transcription (DNA -> RNA) happens in the nucleus where RNA polymerase makes single-stranded RNA from a template DNA strand.
The enzyme that transcribes the DNA into RNA is called RNA polymerase.
No; polymerase is a Protein that is made up from [or comprised of] Amino-Acids. While Amino-Acids make up - or comprise - proteins, nucleotides are the building 'blocks' for both DNA and Rna.
Two of the enzymes involved in DNA replication are helicase and DNA polymerase. Helicase unwinds the DNA strand and DNA polymerase makes a copy.
DNA polymerase is responsible for synthesizing new DNA strands during DNA replication, while RNA polymerase is responsible for transcribing DNA into RNA. DNA polymerase adds nucleotides to the growing DNA strand, ensuring accurate replication of genetic information. RNA polymerase reads the DNA template and synthesizes a complementary RNA strand. Overall, DNA polymerase is involved in DNA replication, while RNA polymerase is involved in transcription.
DNA polymerase matches the bases on the parent strand.
DNA polymerase does not function in the process of transcription. Transcription is the process where RNA is synthesized from a DNA template by RNA polymerase. DNA polymerase, on the other hand, is involved in DNA replication, where it synthesizes a new DNA strand using a DNA template.