Yes, (except for slight random replication mutations that may happen due to exposure to radiation or harsh chemicals or invasion by viruses) apart form the egg and sperm cells which contain only half the DNA.
No - well, sort of.
The DNA in every cell is almost the same, but a tiny snippet of each DNA strand codes the specific job the cell does, and that's what makes each cell's DNA slightly different. For example, the code for a skin cell is different from that of a liver cell. The differences in the "job code" is what makes groups of cells different from one another.
no, not all cells have the same specific DNA but the DNA can all be traced to the one person it came from
The DNA in all of your somatic (body cells) is exactly the same. Only in the egg and sperm is different.
Structurally, the DNA is all cells is the same. The difference lies in the sequence and length of the genome
yes, because different DNA can resolut in different appearences, and many other differences.
Yes, every cell has the excact same DNA codes and amount of DNA. The only exception is in repoductive organs. These have half the amount of DNA.
as a matter of fact, DNA is not different in any cell DNA differs from every human being.....
no there all different
No. The amount of DNA in human sperm cells is half of the amount found in body cells.
* well it depends on what can of cell i know that it is a animal cell but not every body cell is not the same size. * well it depends on what can of cell i know that it is a animal cell but not every body cell is not the same size.
In a normal Human body cell (not a gamete) there are 46 chromosomes. This is not the same number of chromosomes in our bodies, only in one cell, and there are trillions of cells in the human body. In a gamete (a sperm cell or egg cell) there are 23 chromosomes. When the sperm and egg cell nuclei fuse in fertilisation, a diploid cell of 46 chromosomes is produced.
Yes, if they are the result of sexual reproduction and are not identical twins.
The part of an animal cell that is similar to human skin would be the animal skin cells. The animal and human skin cells contain the same organelles.
No. The amount of DNA in human sperm cells is half of the amount found in body cells.
the same as an ant and a colony
no. every cell in the body contains the same genes as every other cell in the body
they are cell that got together that are doing the same jobe
When the body is created the sperm and egg creates a stem cell. These multiply and become all cells of the body with different functions but the same DNA.
* well it depends on what can of cell i know that it is a animal cell but not every body cell is not the same size. * well it depends on what can of cell i know that it is a animal cell but not every body cell is not the same size.
In a normal Human body cell (not a gamete) there are 46 chromosomes. This is not the same number of chromosomes in our bodies, only in one cell, and there are trillions of cells in the human body. In a gamete (a sperm cell or egg cell) there are 23 chromosomes. When the sperm and egg cell nuclei fuse in fertilisation, a diploid cell of 46 chromosomes is produced.
Yes, if they are the result of sexual reproduction and are not identical twins.
The answer would be the same as the weakest parts of a man's body, since both are composed of the same tissue, muscles, nerves, etc.
This is the same as the human brain.
Human Biology refers to quite literally the biology of the human body. Cell Biology can consist of both the life processes of animals (humans) and plants or bacteria, at the cellular level.
Basicaly. yes