It wouldn't DNA is the same in all living things that have it.
The previous answer was written by an idiot. Dog DNA is OBVIOUSLY different from a cat's because DNA is a molecular code which determines the animal's entire physical form. I have no idea what the differences would be, but they wouldn't be the same. If a dog had a cat's DNA, it would be a cat. Simple as that.
The DNA molecule.
The DNA of a cell isn't "produced" it's coppied from when the cell divided from its parent cell, but what you may have ment is from where is the DNA kept, that of course would be the nucleus.
The DNA molecule carries genetic recipes for proteins. Proteins are manufactured in the ribosomes within the cell and are integral in most cell activities.
DNA
histone proteins envelope DNA molecules inside the cell.
The DNA molecule.
The DNA of a cell isn't "produced" it's coppied from when the cell divided from its parent cell, but what you may have ment is from where is the DNA kept, that of course would be the nucleus.
The DNA molecule is the cell's instructions. It is the information contained in this molecule that determines what proteins the cell makes, and we are thinking that a certain part of the molecule called telomeres may even tell the cell how long to live.
yes you would
fdaf
Genetic code of the cell is found in a long molecule known as DNA.
it deforms the cell
Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) is a molecule that carries the genetic instructions.
The DNA molecule carries genetic recipes for proteins. Proteins are manufactured in the ribosomes within the cell and are integral in most cell activities.
The cell disappears...
DNA
ATP How is a large DNA molecule enclosed compactly within the nucleus of a plant cell?