asked 158k views
1 vote
Suggest a reason for the rather large energy excess available in the insertion of a deoxyribonucleotide into a growing DNA molecule. (About three times as much energy as is necessary is available in the reaction dNTP + DNAn → DNAn+1 + pyrophosphate.)

asked
User Deuian
by
8.7k points

1 Answer

2 votes

Favorable forward reaction

Step-by-step explanation:

  • The very favorable forward reaction means that the reverse reaction is very unfavorable
  • This strong forward reaction driving energy effectively inhibits the depolymerization reaction DNAn + pyrophosphate → dNTP + DNAn-1
  • A response that both absorb heat and decreases entropy will be non-unconstrained (positive ∆G) at all temperatures. A few responses, in any case, have a blend of ideal and horrible properties (discharging heat yet diminishing entropy, or retaining heat yet expanding entropy). The ∆G and suddenness of these responses will rely upon the temperature

answered
User Futlib
by
7.9k points
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