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DNA Replication

HSC Biology | Free Study Notes



In this lesson

  • what semi-conservative replication means

  • how complementary base pairing is used

  • how DNA is copied

  • why accurate replication matters

  • how replication supports continuity of genetic information


What is DNA replication?

DNA replication is the process by which DNA makes an exact copy of itself before cell division.

This is important because:

In Module 5, this links directly to the question of how genetic material is replicated exactly. 


Semi-conservative replication

DNA replication is semi-conservative.


What semi-conservative means

Semi-conservative replication means that each new DNA molecule contains:

  • one original strand

  • one newly made strand


Why this matters

This allows the original DNA strands to act as templates, helping preserve the genetic code during replication.



Complementary base pairing


The pairing rules

  • adenine pairs with thymine

  • cytosine pairs with guanine


Why this is important

Because each base can only pair with its complementary partner, the sequence on one strand determines the sequence on the new strand.

This is what allows DNA to be copied accurately.


How DNA replication happens

At this level, students should know the basic steps.


Step 1: the DNA unwinds and unzips

An enzyme breaks the bonds between the two DNA strands.

This separates the strands and creates a replication fork.


Step 2: each original strand acts as a template

The exposed bases on each original strand guide the order of new nucleotides.


Step 3: complementary nucleotides are added

Free DNA nucleotides pair with the exposed bases according to the base-pairing rules.


Step 4: the new strand is joined together

Another enzyme joins the new nucleotides together, forming a complete strand.


Result

Two identical DNA molecules are formed, each with:

  • one original strand

  • one new strand

HSC marking guidance, states that an enzyme unzips the DNA, creates a replication fork, and that complementary nucleotides are added to each original strand before the new section is joined into a double-stranded DNA molecule. 


Continuity of genetic information

DNA replication is essential for the continuity of genetic information.


What this means

Continuity of genetic information means that the instructions stored in DNA are passed on when cells divide.


Why accurate replication matters

If DNA is copied accurately:

  • daughter cells receive the same genetic information

  • body cells can function properly

  • organisms can grow and repair tissues

  • gamete formation begins with correctly replicated DNA before meiosis


Important point

Errors can happen during replication, and these can lead to mutations. HSC marking guidance notes that mutation during DNA replication can be a source of genetic variation. 


DNA replication and cell division

DNA replication happens before:

  • mitosis

  • meiosis

This is important because:

  • mitosis needs copied DNA so each daughter cell gets a full set

  • meiosis needs copied DNA before chromosome separation begins

HSC marking guidance explicitly states that both mitosis and meiosis require DNA replication where the genetic content doubles. 


Why DNA replication is important in heredity

DNA replication supports heredity because it ensures that genetic information is:

  • stored

  • copied

  • passed on

Without accurate replication:

  • cells would not receive correct instructions

  • growth and repair would be affected

  • reproduction would not maintain the species’ genetic continuity


Worked example

Exam-style question

Explain why DNA replication is described as semi-conservative.


Worked answer

DNA replication is described as semi-conservative because each new DNA molecule contains one original parent strand and one newly synthesised strand. The original strands act as templates, and complementary nucleotides are added to form the new strands.


Why this works

This answer:

  • defines semi-conservative clearly

  • mentions the original and new strands

  • links the idea to complementary base pairing


Common mistakes

  • Saying DNA replication is conservative rather than semi-conservative.

  • Forgetting that each original strand acts as a template.

  • Mixing up complementary base pairs.

  • Saying replication happens after mitosis or meiosis.

  • Forgetting that replication produces two identical DNA molecules.


Quick quiz

  1. What is DNA replication?

  2. What does semi-conservative replication mean?

  3. Which bases pair together during replication?

  4. Why is complementary base pairing important?

  5. Why is DNA replication important for continuity of genetic information?



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