Meselson–Stahl & Replication Origins
Fork Asymmetry & Strand Synthesis
Enzymes & Proteins of Replication
Telomeres & Telomerase
DNA Repair & Proofreading
100

What question did Meselson and Stahl set out to answer in 1958?

How DNA is replicated — whether it’s conservative, semi-conservative, or dispersive.

100

Replication forks are asymmetric because DNA polymerase can only add nucleotides to which end of a growing strand?

The 3′ end.

100

What is the main enzyme that adds nucleotides to a new DNA strand?

DNA polymerase (5′→3′ polymerase activity).

100

What is the “end replication problem”?

After RNA primer removal on the lagging strand, the final gap cannot be filled — chromosome ends shorten each cycle.

100

What type of repair corrects errors made during replication?

Mismatch repair.

200

What isotope was used to label “heavy” DNA in their experiment?

¹⁵N (nitrogen-15).

200

What is the difference between the leading and lagging strands?

Leading strand is continuous (5′→3′ toward the fork); lagging strand is discontinuous, forming Okazaki fragments.

200

What activity gives polymerase its proofreading ability?

3′→5′ exonuclease activity (removes mis-paired bases).

200

What is telomerase and what does it carry?

A reverse transcriptase enzyme that carries its own RNA template to extend chromosome ends.

200

Which enzyme detects and removes incorrectly inserted bases as they are added?

DNA polymerase via its 3′→5′ exonuclease (proofreading).

300

Why do eukaryotic chromosomes need many origins of replication but bacteria only one?

Eukaryotic DNA is much longer; multiple origins ensure replication finishes in a reasonable time.

300

What enzyme creates short RNA primers on the lagging strand?

DNA primase.

300

What does DNA helicase do at the replication fork?

Unwinds the DNA double helix using ATP energy.

300

Why is telomerase highly active in stem cells and cancer cells?

Because they divide frequently and need to maintain telomere length for continued replication.

300

List the three general steps in nucleotide excision repair.

1️⃣ Excision of damage  → 2️⃣ Resynthesis by repair polymerase  → 3️⃣ Ligation by DNA ligase.

400

Why are origins of replication critical for chromosome duplication?

They’re specific sequences where DNA unwinds and replication bubbles form, allowing polymerases to start synthesis.

400

Which enzyme seals the nicks between Okazaki fragments after RNA primers are replaced?

DNA ligase (seals phosphodiester bonds using ATP).

400

What is the function of single-strand binding proteins (SSBPs)?

Stabilize unwound DNA and prevent strands from re-annealing or forming hairpins.

400

What happens to somatic cells when telomerase is inactive and telomeres shorten too much?

Cells enter senescence or apoptosis (programmed cell death).

400

What type of damage is caused by UV radiation and how is it repaired?

Thymine dimers; removed by nucleotide excision repair (enzymes cut out and replace damaged DNA).

500

After one generation in ¹⁴N medium, what band pattern was seen in the CsCl gradient?  

A single intermediate band (¹⁵N/¹⁴N hybrid) → proof of semi-conservative replication.

500

Why does the replication fork move bidirectionally from each origin?

Because two helicases move in opposite directions, creating two replication forks that double efficiency.

500

Topoisomerase prevents supercoiling ahead of the fork by doing what?

Introducing temporary nicks to relieve torsional strain, then resealing the DNA.

500

How does the RNA component of telomerase guide DNA synthesis at chromosome ends?

It base-pairs with the 3′ overhang and serves as a template to add repetitive DNA sequences (e.g., TTAGGG).

500

Why is DNA repair vital for cell survival and genetic stability?

It prevents mutations that can lead to cancer, aging, and cell death by maintaining DNA integrity.

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