Same nucleic acids, same coding sequences, though many of those sequences are quite variant, same coding for protein products and many coding regions showing the taxonomic linkage, though very far apart, of these two eukaryotic organisms.
Because the phosphorus group is more susceptible to change than in a strawberry DNA.
It is a polyploid fruit i.e. it has several sets of chromosome complements as a result of scientific intervention. This results in a high DNA content. Also, the pulp is easily broken down meaning the cell walls and membranes can be more readily disrupted thereby releasing more genetic material.
Divide the weight of the strawberry's DNA by the strawberry itself.
In a strawberry to extract the DNA it is required to break down the cell membrane (both the membrane protecting the cell as well as the membrane protecting the nucleus) and pectinase and cellulase in strawberries are enzymes that are break down these membrane...at least in a strawberry.
Magic
a forensic scientist can extract DNA from all living things and some dead things too
There would be more DNA in a strawberry because strawberries are octoploids, they have 8 copies of genes rather than 2 copies found in a cheek cells .
Yes. The DNA is found in the nucleus of every cell. It's simply a case of extracting the DNA from the cell.
It is a polyploid fruit i.e. it has several sets of chromosome complements as a result of scientific intervention. This results in a high DNA content. Also, the pulp is easily broken down meaning the cell walls and membranes can be more readily disrupted thereby releasing more genetic material.
Synthetic octoploids are used in strawberry breeding
Divide the weight of the strawberry's DNA by the strawberry itself.
In a strawberry to extract the DNA it is required to break down the cell membrane (both the membrane protecting the cell as well as the membrane protecting the nucleus) and pectinase and cellulase in strawberries are enzymes that are break down these membrane...at least in a strawberry.
a strawberry
We can not extract DNA from RBCs as they are without nucleus. only the source of DNA extraction is Leukocytes, RBCs are not good source of extraction but we can extract DNA from immature RBCs.
what is it
There are several differences. First, you use different materials to conduct each proceedure. With plants, you need baking soda, with human DNA you do not. Also, with human DNA you do not want to mix your mixtures. You want to keep your tube still. With plant DNA, you have to flick your test tube to make the DNA appear. These are just a few of the differences in the proceedures.
The most commonly cultivated strawberry, Fragaria ananassa, is an octoploid with eight sets. This makes it a good candidate for demonstrating DNA extraction - with eight copies of each gene in the strawberry genome, strawberries are packed full of it.
Yes. A strawberry is an organism; thus, it contains DNA.