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  2. DNA repair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA_repair

    Epigenetic alterations can accompany DNA repair of oxidative damage or double-strand breaks. In human cells, oxidative DNA damage occurs about 10,000 times a day and DNA double-strand breaks occur about 10 to 50 times a cell cycle in somatic replicating cells (see DNA damage (naturally occurring)). The selective advantage of DNA repair is to ...

  3. Lysosomal storage disease - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lysosomal_storage_disease

    The lysosome is commonly referred to as the cell's recycling center because it processes unwanted material into substances that the cell can use. Lysosomes break down this unwanted matter by enzymes, highly specialized proteins essential for survival. Lysosomal disorders are usually triggered when a particular enzyme exists in too small an ...

  4. DNA replication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA_replication

    Eukaryotes initiate DNA replication at multiple points in the chromosome, so replication forks meet and terminate at many points in the chromosome. Because eukaryotes have linear chromosomes, DNA replication is unable to reach the very end of the chromosomes. Due to this problem, DNA is lost in each replication cycle from the end of the chromosome.

  5. Gene duplication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gene_duplication

    At some point during the replication process, the polymerase dissociates from the DNA and replication stalls. When the polymerase reattaches to the DNA strand, it aligns the replicating strand to an incorrect position and incidentally copies the same section more than once. Replication slippage is also often facilitated by repetitive sequences ...

  6. Slipped strand mispairing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slipped_strand_mispairing

    Slippage occurs through five main stages: In the first step, DNA polymerase encounters the direct repeat during the replication process. The polymerase complex suspends replication and is temporarily released from the template strand. The newly synthesized strand then detaches from the template strand and pairs with another direct repeat upstream.

  7. DNA mismatch repair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA_mismatch_repair

    DNA mismatch repair (MMR) is a system for recognizing and repairing erroneous insertion, deletion, and mis-incorporation of bases that can arise during DNA replication and recombination, as well as repairing some forms of DNA damage. [1] [2] Mismatch repair is strand-specific.

  8. Nick (DNA) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nick_(DNA)

    Nick translation is a biological process in which a single-stranded DNA nick serves as the marker for DNA polymerase to excise and replace possibly damaged nucleotides. [3] At the end of the segment that DNA polymerase acts on, DNA ligase must repair the final segment of DNA backbone in order to complete the repair process. [ 4 ]

  9. Eukaryotic DNA replication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eukaryotic_DNA_replication

    During DNA replication, the replisome will unwind the parental duplex DNA into a two single-stranded DNA template replication fork in a 5' to 3' direction. The leading strand is the template strand that is being replicated in the same direction as the movement of the replication fork.

  1. Related searches what happens if lysosomes malfunction in dna replication and translation

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