| 11. | During lagging strand synthesis, the replicative polymerase sends the lagging strand back toward the replication fork.
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| 12. | Replication on the leading and lagging strands is performed by DNA polymerase ? and DNA polymerase ?.
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| 13. | The interaction between DnaG and DnaB is necessary to control the longitude of Okazaki fragments on the lagging strand.
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| 14. | This asymmetry is due the formation of the replication fork and its division into nascent leading and lagging strands.
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| 15. | At this point, the lagging strand replicative polymerase associates with the clamp and primer in order to start polymerisation.
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| 16. | In DNA replication at the lagging strand site, DNA polymerase III removes nucleotides individually from the DNA binding protein.
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| 17. | Any deviation from parity rule 2 will result in asymmetric base composition that discriminates the leading from the lagging strand.
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| 18. | This polymerase synthesizes lagging strand DNA in eukaryotes . ( Thought to form an asymmetric dimer with DNA polymerase epsilon .)
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| 19. | When this is complete, a single nick on the leading strand and several nicks on the lagging strand can be found.
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| 20. | Priming occurs once at the origin on the leading strand and at the start of each Okazaki fragment on the lagging strand.
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