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Question
why is it important for dna to unwind before replication? to prevent the new dna from accidentally sticking together to allow proteins to check for mistakes in the dna strands to improve flexibility in the dna strands phosphate backbone to expose bases so they can be paired with new bases
DNA replication requires the two strands of the double helix to separate (unwind). The bases are on the inside of the double helix. When DNA unwinds, the nitrogenous bases (A, T, C, G) are exposed. DNA replication is semi - conservative, with each strand serving as a template. New complementary bases need to pair with the exposed template bases (A with T, C with G). The first option is incorrect as unwinding isn't about preventing new DNA from sticking. The second option is about proofreading, which happens after replication starts, not the reason for unwinding. The third option is incorrect as unwinding doesn't improve the flexibility of the phosphate backbone for replication purposes. Only the option "to expose bases so they can be paired with new bases" correctly explains the importance of DNA unwinding before replication.
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to expose bases so they can be paired with new bases