DNA Replication | HowStuffWorks
DNA Replication
DNA carries the information for making all of the cell's proteins. These proteins implement all of the functions of a living organism and determine the organism's characteristics. When the cell reproduces, it has to pass all of this information on to the daughter cells.
Before a cell can reproduce, it must first replicate, or make a copy of, its DNA. Where DNA replication occurs depends upon whether the cells is a prokaryotic or a eukaryote (see the RNA sidebar on the previous page for more about the types of cells). DNA replication occurs in 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) directions. The beauty of this structure is that it can unzip down the middle and each side can serve as a pattern or template for the other side (called semi-conservative replication). However, DNA does not unzip entirely. It unzips in a small area called a replication fork, which then moves down the entire length of the molecule.
Let's look at the details:
Different types of cells replicated their DNA at different rates. Some cells constantly divide, like those in your hair and fingernails and bone marrow cells. Other cells go through several rounds of cell division and stop (including specialized cells, like those in your brain, muscle and heart). Finally, some cells stop dividing, but can be induced to divide to repair injury (such as skin cells and liver cells). In cells that do not constantly divide, the cues for DNA replication/cell division come in the form of chemicals. These chemicals can come from other parts of the body (hormones) or from the environment.
Animal vs. Plant DNAThe DNA of all living organisms has the same structure and code, although some viruses use RNA as the information carrier instead of DNA. Most animals have two copies of each chromosome. In contrast, plants may have more than two copies of several chromosomes, which usually arise from errors in the distribution of the chromosomes during cell reproduction. In animals, this type of error usually causes genetic diseases that are usually fatal. For some unknown reasons, this type of error is not as devastating to plants.
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