Biology, asked by zubairahmed8189, 8 months ago

what is the roke of DNA replication in maintaining specie identity​

Answers

Answered by NiCK08
1

Answer:

The role of DNA is to bring similar characteristics of both the parents to the offspring. It usually gives the offspring some variations which help it to survive some conditions where others would fail.

Hope this helps you!

Answered by aaflh
2

Chromosomal DNA replication in plants has requirements and constraints similar to those in other eukaryotes. However, some aspects are plant-specific. Studies of DNA replication control in plants, which have unique developmental strategies, can offer unparalleled opportunities of comparing regulatory processes with yeast and, particularly, metazoa to identify common trends and basic rules. In addition to the comparative molecular and biochemical studies, genomic studies in plants that started with Arabidopsis thaliana in the year 2000 have now expanded to several dozens of species. This, together with the applicability of genomic approaches and the availability of a large collection of mutants, underscores the enormous potential to study DNA replication control in a whole developing organism. Recent advances in this field with particular focus on the DNA replication proteins, the nature of replication origins and their epigenetic landscape, and the control of endoreplication will be reviewed. Faithful genome duplication during the S phase of the cell cycle uses strategies largely conserved in all eukaryotes (DePamphilis and Bell 2011) and is pivotal to preserve genome integrity. Genome duplication in dividing plant cells has the same requirements and constraints than in animal cells, including the strict rule of occurring once and only once every cell cycle. The initial discoveries of several basic biological processes were performed in studies with plant cells, e.g., transposons, telomeres, RNA interference, to cite a few. DNA replication in eukaryotes is not an exception. Pioneering work in the mid-1950s showed the semiconservative nature of chromosomal DNA replication in the common bean Vicia faba (Taylor et al. 1957). Since then, plant DNA replication in eukaryotes is not an exception. Pioneering work in the mid-1950s showed the semiconservative nature of chromosomal DNA replication in the common bean Vicia faba (Taylor et al. 1957). Since then, plant DNA replication studies have focused primarily on defining temporal patterns of DNA replication at the chromosomal level along the S phase. DNA fiber autoradiography

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