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Question
Explain how the single-stranded RNA of viruses give rise to double-stranded DNA.
Explain
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Solution
The conversion of single-stranded viral RNA into double-stranded DNA is called reverse transcription and is carried out by the viral enzyme reverse transcriptase.
The process follows these steps:
- First Strand Synthesis: After entering the host cell, the enzyme uses the viral single-stranded RNA as a template to synthesise a complementary DNA strand, forming an RNA-DNA hybrid.
- RNA Degradation: An associated enzyme activity (RNase H) degrades the original viral RNA strand within the hybrid, leaving only the newly synthesised single DNA strand.
- Second Strand Synthesis: The reverse transcriptase then uses this single DNA strand as a template to synthesise a second, complementary DNA strand.
- Result: This results in a stable double-stranded DNA molecule, which can then be integrated into the host cell's genome by another enzyme called integrase.
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Chapter 6: Molecular Basis of Inheritance - TEST YOUR PROGRESS [Page 274]
