QUESTION IMAGE
Question
which of the following is not an enzyme within the host cell?
○ polymerase
○ replicase
○ forward transcriptase
○ reverse transcriptase
Brief Explanations
- Polymerase: Host cells have polymerases (e.g., DNA polymerase, RNA polymerase) for replication/transcription.
- Replicase: Some host systems have replicases for nucleic acid replication.
- Forward transcriptase: Not a recognized host enzyme; normal transcription uses RNA polymerase (no "forward transcriptase" as a distinct host enzyme).
- Reverse transcriptase: Typically viral (e.g., retroviruses), not a host cell enzyme (hosts don't naturally do reverse transcription of RNA to DNA as a core function, unlike viruses like HIV which use it). Wait, correction: Wait, the options—wait, reverse transcriptase is viral (host cells don't have it natively), while the other options: Wait, no, let's re - check. Wait, the question is which is NOT a host cell enzyme. Reverse transcriptase is encoded by retroviruses (like HIV) and is not a normal host cell enzyme. Wait, but let's check each:
- Polymerase: Host has DNA and RNA polymerases.
- Replicase: Some host - associated replicative enzymes exist.
- Forward transcriptase: Not a standard host enzyme (transcription is done by RNA polymerase, no "forward transcriptase" term). But more accurately, reverse transcriptase is not a host enzyme. Wait, maybe the question has a typo, but among the options, reverse transcriptase is the one that is viral (not host - encoded). Host cells do not have reverse transcriptase as a normal enzyme (they transcribe DNA to RNA, not RNA to DNA in the normal cellular machinery; reverse transcriptase is used by retroviruses to make DNA from their RNA genome).
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D. Reverse transcriptase