Are Leading and Lagging Strands Parent or Daughter DNA?

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The discussion clarifies the terminology surrounding leading and lagging strands in DNA replication. It emphasizes that these terms refer to the newly synthesized daughter strands rather than the original parent strands. The parent strand serves as a template for both leading and lagging strand synthesis, depending on the direction of replication. In a replication bubble, one parent strand can template the leading strand on one side and the lagging strand on the opposite side, resolving any confusion about the definitions of leading and lagging strands.
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I'm confused regarding one aspect concerning the leading and the lagging strands. Are they the strands which were present before replication occurs (i.e. the original/parent strands) or are they the strands which come into being after replication is completed (i.e. the newly synthesized/daughter strands).

Note:- I understand the 5' to 3' and vice versa distinctions/definitions of the two so don't explain in terms of that.
 
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Usually the daughter strands (but the terminology is not so fixed that you can't say "leading strand replication" or "leading parent strand" or "leading template strand").

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK26850/ (Fig. 5.8)
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK21751/ (Fig. 12.9)
 
As atyy said, "leading" and "lagging" refer to the daughter strands. This is in part because the parent strand can template both leading and lagging strand synthesis. For example, consider a replication bubble. On the side of the bubble, the left side of the bubble, the top parent strand acts as the template for leading strand synthesis while on the right, the same parent strand acts as the template for lagging strand synthesis.
 
That cleared up any confusion I had. Thanks.
 
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