Transcription refers to the "rewriting" of gene sequences contained in the DNA into a related but not identical language, the mRNA. The three phases of transcription are called:
- initiation
- elongation and
- termination.
Strand separation is carried out by the helicase, elongation with the aid of polymerase III (works on single strands only in the 5'-3' direction), initiation by the enzyme primase, which forms the primers. Polymerase I removes the RNA primers and replaces them with DNA nucleotides; the gaps in the new DNA are closed by DNA ligase. The mechanism is leading- or lagging-strand adapted!
Transcription is necessary because the DNA is too large and too valuable to move through the cell. During transcription, the genetic information of the DNA is transcribed into mRNA by a copying process of the RNA polymerase. The mRNA (messenger RNA) then serves as a "transcript" for translation. In this subsequent process, the mRNA is translated into amino acids on the ribosome. Genes are read at different frequencies. This allows the cell to react appropriately depending on the conditions and to produce different amounts of mRNA.