Biology, asked by Sankalpparab28911, 9 months ago

Why both strands of dna are not copied during transcription give two reasons?

Answers

Answered by wwwashwin904
2

Answer:

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Explanation:

The outer layer (epidermis)

It is mostly made up of cells that produce keratin (keratinocytes). These cells are gradually pushed to the surface of the skin by newer cells, where they harden and then eventually die off. ... Only rarely is the balance of new cell production and old cell shedding affected by illness.

Answered by Anonymous
11

Answer:

Both the strands of DNA are not copied during transcription because if both strands act as a template, they would code for RNA with different sequence the two RNA molecules, if produced simultaneously would be complementary to each other, hence would form a double stranded RNA. Transcription is when RNA is made from DNA. During transcription, RNA polymerase makes a copy of a gene from the DNA to mRNA as needed. This process is similar in eukaryotes and prokaryotes. One difference, however, is that eukaryotic RNA polymerase associates with mRNA processing enzymes during transcription so that processing can proceed quickly after the start of transcription.

Explanation:

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