Abstract

What is the precise molecular mechanism of semi-conservative DNA replication? After the great efforts of the past 20 years, molecular biology has now established the discontinuous syntheses of daughter DNA on both of the parental strands. In order to explain this type of discontinuous replication, we introduce the concept of a palindromic primer. First we focus our attention on various oligomers (RNA or DNA) which appear usually or occasionally in the process of replication. Then we propose the palindromic nature of these oligomers so as to serve as the primer of DNA synthesis. This postulation gives a theoretical reasoning for the discontinuities of both new strands in the fork region of replication. Subsequently we consider Watson's concatemeric intermediate theory, proposed for the explanation of replicative synthesis of phage T7 DNA. By considering the contribution of some sequence-specific endonuclease(s), we suggest the existence of partial palindromic sequences of bases at the connecting region(s) in which the redundant ends of the respective phage DNA molecules are overlapping. Another theory on the replication of linear chromosomal DNA including the concept of the terminal palindromic sequence of bases is also analyzed from the viewpoint of palindromic primer. Further, some recent experimental approaches, especially on the origin(s) of DNA replication, are shown to favour the concept of a palindromic primer.

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