For prokaryotes, bidirectional replication requires two replisomes for each dividing nucleoid (region containing genetic material but not a nucleus).
Changes made to one copy of a table are duplicated to a second copy, and changes made to the second copy are repeated back to the first copy, in a process known as bidirectional replication.
DNA replication that is bidirectional occurs in organisms from all of the major kingdoms. DNA is replicated in two directions simultaneously during bidirectional replication, resulting in a leading strand (where replication happens more quickly) and a trailing strand (with slower replication).
The replicating process moves in two directions during bidirectional synthesis. Only one replication fork forms in unidirectional replication. Two replication forks form in bidirectional replication. Only one end of the replication eye moves or grows during unidirectional replication.
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