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Repliosome?
Started by csx
Anyone know what this is and how it differs from Helicase? Their functions sound the same to me -__-
For the MCAT, the polymerase plus all of the accessory proteins like the helicase that come together to form a complex is known as the replisome.
So it's easier to think about the replisome as like a big tool box which carries certain tools such has helicase, DNA Pol1 , etc.
It is essentially a complex that carries various proteins including helicase.
View attachment 183290
Think of it like this: The polymerase, gyrase, helicase, and other various initiation factors etc. do NOT act in isolation of each other. Rather, they come together and complex in what is known as a replisome.
"The replisome is composed of a number of proteins including helicase, RFC, PCNA, gyrase/topoisomerase,SSB/RPA, primase, DNA polymerase I, RNAse H, and ligase."
The replisome is the combination of all the smaller functional subunits.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Replisome (Paragraph 2)
The replisome is the combination of all the smaller functional subunits.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Replisome (Paragraph 2)