well it may develop into cancer if other DNA is mixed into your body's cell.
but not inject anyway.
No. Injecting avian DNA into your body would not give you wings, nor should it affect your DNA.
A bacteriophage ("eater of bacteria") inject their DNA (or RNA) into the cell.
DNA or RNA
Bacteriophage T4 virus
Inject hamster DNA into your taint.
Bacteria take DNA from their environment.Bacteria inject DNA into another cell
Most viruses have either RNA or DNA bound in a basic membrane. During infection, they will inject this into the host cell so that the host cell can read and use its own mechanisms to replicate the virus.
No, a lysogenic virus integrates its DNA into the host cell's genome instead of injecting it. This integrated viral DNA, called a prophage, replicates along with the host cell's DNA.
Nope.Viruses can't reproduce by themselves, they have to inject their DNA into a living cell where it inserts itself into the hosts DNA to be...........................
I think it has to be an embryo or it won't work. Plant embryos are inside the seed.
Transduction
Bacteria transfer DNA with a bacteriophage.