"Yes and No, humans share 99.9% of the same genetic material. The .1% is what makes everyone different from one another!"
That .1% isn't actually a difference, it's simply the varying ratio between dormant/active DNA. In other words, everyone has the gene that makes ones skin naturally white or black.
The DNA sequence in all humans is NOT exactly alike! All DNA in humans have a double helix (spiral staircase) shape and A, T, C, and G bases. The sequences are totally not the same though. If they were, we would all look alike.
Yes and no. Humans share the same set of genes but not necessarily the same form of those genes. Different forms of genes called alleles allow us to have different traits such as attached earlobes versus unattached earlobes. The same gene codes for earlobes but one form calls for them to be attached but another calla for them to be unattached. If our DNA was totally identical every member of the human race would be identical with every other member.
We all have the same amount and the same kinds, but are not entirely all the same. If it were, we would all look the same.
No, every human has a different set of DNA. That is why police can tell the differnece between two people using two different sets of hair.
No. Everyone's genes are different. That's how God made us.
No everyones is different
NO, and that would be really weird, too.
No
a syllogism
All DNA pairs of the human body are 100% identical, regardless of where the sample is taken from. Hair cells have the same DNA structure as skin cells, saliva, sperm, etc. Every humans DNA is unique, this allows scientists to identify who a specific sample belongs to.
All of them do, if you mean vegetables and humans have genes that are identical. While plants and humans are wildly different, every cell has to do specific things to survive, like metabolize sugar or repair damage to their own DNA. That is true for plant cells, human cells, bacterial cells, or any other type of cell. So anything that's made of cells (including single-celled organisms) is living and contains DNA. And some of that DNA will be identical. I feel like I should mention that all cells also have RNA. DNA is used as a recipe to make proteins. However, the mechanism to make proteins is in a different place than where the DNA is housed. RNA is a copy of a small piece of DNA (gene) that can travel to the protein-making machinery.
all the cells have identical DNA
Because they separated into separate beings early in the cell division process. After that, a quadrillion factors are involved in the minuscule differences all along the development process. This is how they become different people.
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a syllogism
The DNA of all humans is essentially identical and allows breeding, despite a difference in the continental origin of the parents.
All DNA pairs of the human body are 100% identical, regardless of where the sample is taken from. Hair cells have the same DNA structure as skin cells, saliva, sperm, etc. Every humans DNA is unique, this allows scientists to identify who a specific sample belongs to.
all the cells have identical DNA
Most of DNA is common to all humans. Even 99% is the same as chimps have. The rest is what makes us, us. However there is enough different that we can identify one person from another by their DNA.
All of them do, if you mean vegetables and humans have genes that are identical. While plants and humans are wildly different, every cell has to do specific things to survive, like metabolize sugar or repair damage to their own DNA. That is true for plant cells, human cells, bacterial cells, or any other type of cell. So anything that's made of cells (including single-celled organisms) is living and contains DNA. And some of that DNA will be identical. I feel like I should mention that all cells also have RNA. DNA is used as a recipe to make proteins. However, the mechanism to make proteins is in a different place than where the DNA is housed. RNA is a copy of a small piece of DNA (gene) that can travel to the protein-making machinery.
Yes, they both are [all but] Identical.
Every single cell in the human body contains identical genetic information. Every cell contains all of the information required to create a copy of yourself.
Because they separated into separate beings early in the cell division process. After that, a quadrillion factors are involved in the minuscule differences all along the development process. This is how they become different people.
Yes - the appearance of DNA is identical in all organisms.
Humans are the same species: they have the same DNA sequences.