DNA replication is the process of producing two
identical copies from one original DNA
molecule. This biological process occurs in all living organisms and is
the basis for biological
inheritance. DNA is composed of two strands and each strand of the original
DNA molecule serves as template for the production of the complementary strand,
a process referred to as semiconservative
replication. Cellular proofreading and
error-checking mechanisms ensure near perfect fidelity for DNA replication.[1][2]
In a cell, DNA replication
begins at specific locations, or origins of
replication, in the genome.[3] Unwinding of DNA at the origin and
synthesis of new strands results in replication forks
growing bidirectionally from the origin. A number of proteins are associated with
the replication fork which assist in the initiation and continuation of DNA
synthesis. Most prominently, DNA polymerase
synthesizes the new DNA by adding complementary nucleotides to the template
strand.
DNA
replication can also be performed in
vitro (artificially, outside a cell). DNA polymerases isolated from
cells and artificial DNA primers can be used to initiate DNA synthesis at known
sequences in a template DNA molecule. The polymerase chain
reaction (PCR), a common laboratory technique, cyclically applies such
artificial synthesis to amplify a specific target DNA fragment from a pool of
DNA.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8/DNA_replication_en.svg
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