Insulin is not produced by skin cells.
DNA doen't leave the nucleus but a copy of the segment (called mRNA) that codes for the protein leaves the cell and meets up with a ribosome. The ribosome will translate the copy of the DNA into a specific protein.
DNA changes to RNA when the nucleus is going through protein synthesis. in order for your ribosomes to make protein they must copy a portion of your DNA, change it into RNA then translate the RNA into amino acid sequences which come all together to make a protein ...
The term "scribe" traditionally refers to a person tasked with transcribing or copying texts by hand, often in a careful and precise manner. Scribes were essential in preserving and disseminating knowledge in pre-printing press eras.
Human insulin is made with bacteria through recombinant DNA. It introduces a copy of human insulin DNA to a host cell, which then produces human insulin.
copy it than paste it on to a translater
Yes; DNA makes RNA, & RNA makes polypeptides (proteins)
Whatever is in cells can be copied to other cells. There are many ways to copy cells with the keyboard and the mouse. You can do it with the mouse in a number of ways. You can copy with the Fill Handle. You can do it by right-clicking on the mouse and pick options to copy and paste from the shortcut menu. You can use the mouse with the Ctrl key, to copy.
Yes, all cells have a copy of the genetic material found in the other cells (red blood cells are an exception, as they have no nucleus).
by mitosis
daughter cells bro! daughter cells...
In order to translate a name into Ogham Script, you must first obtain a copy of the Ogham alphabet. After this, translate the individual letters in the name "Erin".
unprotected cells