Clean educational infographic showing DNA replication in prokaryotes versus eukaryotes with a balanced side-by-side layout, crisp labels, and cool blue vector styling. Designed with medical-textbook clarity and colorful editorial visuals, it highlights origins, forks, helicase, polymerase, and multiple origins; includes arm and hand bones labeled as a target keyword only.
Re-render this exact infographic with every label, heading and caption translated. We re-use all the original attributes (topic, style, palette, …) and only swap the language. Currently in English.
Biological diagram infographic titled "DNA Replication: Prokaryote vs Eukaryote" centered on a clean labeled comparison diagram showing two parallel editorial scientific illustrations: left, a circular bacterial chromosome undergoing DNA replication; right, a linear eukaryotic chromosome segment with multiple replication origins and replication forks. Use a side-by-side comparison layout with balanced symmetry, university undergraduate teaching clarity, colorful kids-book visual style, cool clinical blues palette with cyan, teal, soft navy, pale ice blue, and small contrasting accents for key enzymes. Render vector-clean lines, crisp labels, simplified but biologically accurate molecular structures, medical-textbook clarity, editorial scientific illustration, vector-clean lines, no photographic textures. Include 9 labeled parts total, each with a thin leader line, a short label in quotes, and a one-line function description in quotes. Labels should be distributed evenly around the central diagram and point precisely to the correct structure. Include subtle comparison headers above each side: "Prokaryote" and "Eukaryote". The 9 labels are: 1. "Origin of Replication" — "DNA synthesis begins at this specific start site." 2. "Replication Bubble" — "Local DNA opening creates a region where copying can proceed." 3. "Helicase" — "Unwinds the double helix by separating the two strands." 4. "Replication Fork" — "Y-shaped junction where parental DNA is copied into new strands." 5. "Leading Strand" — "Synthesized continuously in the same direction as fork movement." 6. "Lagging Strand" — "Synthesized discontinuously as short Okazaki fragments." 7. "DNA Polymerase" — "Adds nucleotides to build the new complementary DNA strand." 8. "RNA Primer" — "Provides a short starting point for DNA polymerase to begin synthesis." 9. "Multiple Origins" — "Eukaryotic chromosomes use many start sites to speed replication." Emphasize comparison differences biologically accurately: one origin on circular bacterial DNA versus many origins on linear eukaryotic DNA, while preserving shared replication machinery. Keep all text sharp, readable, and high contrast. No unrelated anatomy, no arm or hand bones, no extra search-intent text rendered in the image. All text MUST be written in English (array). Every heading, label, caption, legend and metric name in the image must be in English — not English. Spell each English word correctly using English characters and diacritics. Numbers stay as digits, no graphic gore, no real patient photos, no watermarks No graphic medical gore, no real patient photographs, no surgical blood. For human anatomy, keep illustrations educationally tasteful. For animal anatomy, no cruelty imagery. Scientifically accurate labeling and proportions.
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