Biology, asked by ModanRoy, 1 year ago

where does the enzyme telomerase act

Answers

Answered by noorkaran
2

If you could zoom in and look at the DNA on the tip of one of your chromosomes, what would you see? You might expect to find genes, or perhaps some DNA sequences involved in gene regulation. Instead, what you'd actually find is a single sequence –TTAGGG – repeated over and over again, hundreds or even thousands of times.

Answered by daminee81
0
Some cells have the ability to reverse telomere shortening by expressing telomerase, an enzyme that extends the telomeres of chromosomes.Telomerase is an RNA-dependent DNA polymerase, meaning an enzyme that can make DNA using RNA as a template
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