while animal cells such as humans may take up to 400 hours. In addition, eukaryotes also have a distinct process for replicating the telomeres at the ends of their chromosomes. With their circular chromosomes, prokaryotes have no ends to synthesize. Lastly,...
Topology, Type II DNA Topoisomerases and DNA Replication in Prokaryotes and EukaryotesDNA replication raises several topological questions. i) How did the two parental strands uncoil in spite of the restriction imposed to their rotation either by DNA circularity or by the barriers which segregate the...
Describe the differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes in DNA replication: 1) replication, 2) elongation and 3) termination. Compare and contrast DNA and RNA in terms of structure and function. Some aspects of DNA replication are different in prokaryotes and eukaryotes; o...
Describe the differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes in DNA replication: 1) replication, 2) elongation and 3) termination. Describe the various roles of proteins in DNA replication. How does DNA replication initiate? Explain what happens during DNA replication. ...
prokaryotes, eukaryotes dna replication is ___ between prokaryotes and eukaryotes similar More is known about how replication works in ___ than in ___ bacteria, eukaryotes first step of dna replication: initiation of replication ___ ___ ___-where the two DNA strands are separated, opening ...
DNA replication occursin the cytoplasm of prokaryotes and in the nucleus of eukaryotes. Regardless of where DNA replication occurs, the basic process is the same. The structure of DNA lends itself easily to DNA replication. Each side of the double helix runs in opposite (anti-parallel) direction...
(Laufs et al., 1995). Its three dimensional structure shows the presence of highly conservedcatalytic domainthat is also conserved among prokaryotes and eukaryotes (Campos-Olivas et al., 2002a). The size of Rep is 41kDa and it containsDNA bindingregion (having nick andoligomerizationdomains) ...
In addition, RFBs can originate from a variety of complexes formed by DNA and non-nucleosomal proteins present along the eukaryotic genome [3]. In eukaryotes, RFBs can be found at telomeres, centromeres, highly transcribed genes, and origins of replication, among other locations [2]. Further...
Likewise, in eukaryotes, cells accumulate mutations as they divide. In humans, if enough somatic mutations (i.e., mutations in body cells rather than sperm oreggcells) accumulate over the course of a person's lifetime, the end result could be cancer. Or, less frequently, some cancer mutati...
What are the unique processes in meiosis that are not present in mitosis? Why do chromosomes, not individual genes, assort independently? Why are trinucleotide repeat diseases autosomal dominant? How does mitosis and cytokinesis in eukaryotes differ from binary fission in prokaryotes?