No, not all human cells are alike. Cells are specialized to do a certain job. For example, a nerve cell is different red blood cell because they have different jobs to do. They look different, have differentnumbers of certain organelles's, and they are not all alike.
no, because our livers are red blood
They each contain the same identical genetic complement.
Some Cells have the same functions and some of them have a different type of function.
all the cells have identical DNA
If you are talking about mitosis, yes, the daughter cells are identical to themselves and even their parents. But when it comes to meiosis, the daughter cells are not alike, they show variation
Daughter cells are identical to their parent cells in mitosis. During this form of cell division, somatic cells separate into two identical daughter cells.
mitosis ends with 2 identical daughter cells and meiosis ends with 4 non-identical sister chromatids.
It is said that in meiosis, the daughter cells are not identical, cause the daughters cells have a combination of both parents' chromosomes. In the cell cycle they are identical.
No all cells are different
all the cells have identical DNA
The genetic information, as in the sequence of the DNA, is identical in all the cells of the body.
No
If you are talking about mitosis, yes, the daughter cells are identical to themselves and even their parents. But when it comes to meiosis, the daughter cells are not alike, they show variation
Cells form new cells with identical genetic composition through mitosis. This essentially involves the cell producing enough resources for two cells and then splitting it's membranes into two separate and distinct bodies.
Mitosis is the phase when the celldivides into two cells that are identical to the original cell (two identical daughter cells).Hope that helps! :)
No they don't
Daughter cells are identical to their parent cells in mitosis. During this form of cell division, somatic cells separate into two identical daughter cells.
they are identical
Identical twins.
mitosis ends with 2 identical daughter cells and meiosis ends with 4 non-identical sister chromatids.