Science, asked by MancyJambhulkar, 2 months ago

Cells employ an arsenal of editing mechanisms to correct mistakes made during DNA replication. How do

they work, and what happens when these systems fail?​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

DNA replication is a truly amazing biological phenomenon. Consider the countless number of times that your cells divide to make you who you are—not just during development, but even now, as a fully mature adult. Then consider that every time a human cell divides and its DNA replicates, it has to copy and transmit the exact same sequence of 3 billion nucleotides to its daughter cells. Finally, consider the fact that in life (literally), nothing is perfect. While most DNA replicates with fairly high fidelity, mistakes do happen, with polymerase enzymes sometimes inserting the wrong nucleotide or too many or too few nucleotides into a sequence. Fortunately, most of these mistakes are fixed through various DNA repair processes.

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I hope this helps you........

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