Major project report on Tata Motors and its marketing strategies
Presentation1 it about the biology explaining marvel of dna replication and transcription .pptx
1.
2. Before a cell divides, its DNA must first be
copied.
How might the double-helix structure of DNA
make that possible?
3.
4. DNA replication
• The parent molecule unwinds, and two new
daughter strands are built based on base-pairing
rules
(a) The parent molecule has two
complementary strands of DNA.
Each base is paired by hydrogen
bonding with its specific partner,
A with T and G with C.
(b) The first step in replication is
separation of the two DNA
strands.
(c) Each parental strand now
serves as a template that
determines the order of
nucleotides along a new,
complementary strand.
(d) The nucleotides are connected
to form the sugar-phosphate
backbones of the new strands.
Each “daughter” DNA
molecule consists of one parental
strand and one new strand.
A
C
T
A
G
A
C
T
A
G
A
C
T
A
G
A
C
T
A
G
T
G
A
T
C
T
G
A
T
C
A
C
T
A
G
A
C
T
A
G
T
G
A
T
C
T
G
A
T
C
T
G
A
T
C
T
G
A
T
C
5. Enzymes in DNA replication
Helicase unwinds
parental double helix
Binding proteins
stabilize separate
strands
DNA polymerase III
binds nucleotides
to form new strands
Ligase joins Okazaki
fragments and seals
other nicks in sugar-
phosphate backbone
Primase adds
short primer
to template strand
DNA polymerase I
(Exonuclease) removes
RNA primer and inserts
the correct bases
6.
7. DNA transcription is the process of creating a
complimentary RNA molecule, called messenger
RNA (mRNA), from a DNA template.
Stages of Transcription
Transcription proceeds in enzymatically catalysed steps
1.Initiation
2.Elongation
3.Termination
8. •Initiation:
• RNA polymerase (RNAP) recruits to the DNA template.
• RNAP reads the DNA template and positions itself at the binding site.
• RNAP begins to unwind the DNA double helix.
•Elongation:
• RNAP adds nucleotides to the growing RNA chain, in a complementary manner to the DNA template.
• Nucleotides are added in a 5' to 3' direction, opposite to the direction of DNA replication.
• RNAP moves along the DNA template as nucleotides are added, synthesizing the RNA molecule.
•Termination:
• When RNAP reaches the end of the DNA template, it releases the RNA molecule and dissociates from the
DNA.
• The RNA molecule is then transported out of the nucleus and into the cytoplasm for translation.