DNA replication is like copying your favorite storybook so you and your friend can both read it.
When a cell gets ready to divide, it needs to make a copy of its DNA, the special instruction book that tells the body how to grow and work. This happens in two parts: first, the DNA unwinds, like opening a zipper on a jacket. Then, each side is used as a template to build a new strand, just like copying a sentence by looking at each letter one by one.
How It Keeps Things Accurate
Imagine you're copying a recipe for your favorite cookie, if you make a mistake, the cookies might not turn out right. But DNA has a clever way of checking its work. Each letter in the DNA is matched with the correct partner, like how red and blue blocks always pair up when building with LEGO bricks.
This matching makes sure that each new copy of DNA is almost exactly the same as the original, just like you and your friend both having the exact same storybook to read. That way, every cell gets a perfect set of instructions so everything in the body keeps working smoothly!
Examples
- A parent cell copies its DNA so that each new cell gets a full set of instructions.
- Like copying a recipe book before splitting it into two identical sets for two kitchens.
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See also
- What are nucleotides?
- Does DNA have the equivalent of IF-statements, WHILE loops, or function calls? How?
- What is Guanine (G)?
- What are origins of replication?
- How Does Transcription and Translation: From DNA to Protein Work?