Replication fork: Difference between revisions

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The Replication Fork is the site from which [[DNA|DNA]] is [[DNA synthesis|synthesised]]. As the new strands are formed from the parental strand as it unwinds, it forms a fork shape.<ref>Berg J., Tymoczko J and Stryer L. (2012) Biochemistry, 7th edition, New York: WH Freeman.fckLRPage 853</ref>  
The Replication Fork is the site from which [[DNA|DNA]] is [[DNA synthesis|synthesised]]. As the new strands are formed from the parental strand as it unwinds, it forms a fork shape&nbsp;<ref>Berg J., Tymoczko J and Stryer L. (2012) Biochemistry, 7th edition, New York: WH Freeman.fckLRPage 853</ref>. At a replication fork, both strands are synthesised in a 5' to 3' direction. The leading strand is synthesised continuously, whereas the lagging strand is synthesised in short pieces called [[Okazaki fragments|Okazaki fragments]]<ref>Stryer, Biochemistry 5th Edition, 760</ref>.


'''Reference'''
The replication fork is asymmetrical&nbsp;because the DNA is&nbsp;replicated by [[Semiconservative_replication]] using DNA_polymerase. At the replication fork, Y shaped structure,&nbsp;DNA of both new daughter strands are formed. This is made possible by a multienzyme complex&nbsp;which contains DNA polymerase. <ref>Bruce Alberts et al. Molecular Biology of the Cell, 5th edition, 2008, Garland Science, New York. Chapter 5 : DNA replication, Repair, and Recombination, page 266</ref>


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Latest revision as of 23:48, 3 December 2015

The Replication Fork is the site from which DNA is synthesised. As the new strands are formed from the parental strand as it unwinds, it forms a fork shape [1]. At a replication fork, both strands are synthesised in a 5' to 3' direction. The leading strand is synthesised continuously, whereas the lagging strand is synthesised in short pieces called Okazaki fragments[2].

The replication fork is asymmetrical because the DNA is replicated by Semiconservative_replication using DNA_polymerase. At the replication fork, Y shaped structure, DNA of both new daughter strands are formed. This is made possible by a multienzyme complex which contains DNA polymerase. [3]

Reference

  1. Berg J., Tymoczko J and Stryer L. (2012) Biochemistry, 7th edition, New York: WH Freeman.fckLRPage 853
  2. Stryer, Biochemistry 5th Edition, 760
  3. Bruce Alberts et al. Molecular Biology of the Cell, 5th edition, 2008, Garland Science, New York. Chapter 5 : DNA replication, Repair, and Recombination, page 266