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Apr 30, 2002 ... In humans, DNA is copied at about 50 base pairs per second. The process would take a month (rather than the hour it actually does) without ...
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www.contexo.info/DNA_Basics/DNA%20Replication.htm
www.contexo.info/DNA_Basics/DNA%20Replication.htm
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Once a model for the structure of DNA had been developed it immediately suggested a method of (1) replication and (2) a way to translate the DNA code into protein structure protein synthesis. ... How is DNA copied or replicated...
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kentsimmons.uwinnipeg.ca/cm1504/dnareplication.htm
kentsimmons.uwinnipeg.ca/cm1504/dnareplication.htm
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DNA replication - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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DNA replication , the basis for biological inheritance, is a fundamental process occurring in all living organisms to copy their DNA. This process is "semiconservative" in that each strand of the ori...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA_replication
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Slide 25 of 26...
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www.umbc.edu/bioclass/biol100/powerpoints/lecture04/sld...
www.umbc.edu/bioclass/biol100/powerpoints/lecture04/sld025.htm
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Since DNA is double stranded i.e. there are two sides to the double helix each side can be used to make the other side due to complementary base pairing Steps in DNA Replication Step #1: To unwind the DNA molecule by breaking the weak hydro...
http://bioserv.fiu.edu/%7Ewalterm/GenBio2004/chapter11_...
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A new automated process speeds up DNA copying - one of the central processes in genetic analysis and biotechnology. ... Convection, the circulation of hot liquids, can drive a chain reaction that makes strands of DNA multiply exponentially fast, show Dieter Braun and colleagues at Rockefeller University in New York1.
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www.nature.com/nsu/031013/031013-6.html
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During the 1980s, scientists figured out how to do it artificially in a process called the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). A length of DNA - the famous double helix - can be copied by separating the two strands and using each of them as a template.
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www.vetscite.org/publish/items/001557/index.html
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Although more than a decade ago cell biologists identified the master protein that guarantees that DNA replication occurs only once, they don't understand how it exerts its power. Now, part of that puzzle has been solved.
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www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/summary/292/5526/2415
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