not sure if this is what you mean but i kow that the skin on the inside of ur cheek is specialised. it is constantly wet and unafected by this.
Generally Human Cheek cells (as with skin cells) are dead on the outermost layers, and still alive on the deeper layers. So the cheek cells are dead even before you take them out of your mouth.
Just skin cells. Or not scientifically, you could, I guess, say just cheek cells
because cheek cells are part of an animal cell so it cannot be used and it is specialised whereas stem cells are part of a planet cell so it can be used a lot of times and it is not specialised
Most any cell of the human blod can be sused. The most commonly used are epiphelial cells of the skin or cheek. One can also use the cells found in the blood (other than red blood cells, which have no DNA in them).
The cheek cells and skin cells are similar becuase they both are cells they are on the body.
Onion cells are larger. Skin cheek cells are smaller probably due to the fact that they're overlapped or rolled up.
A cell wall.
palm cells are round
It is much easier to extract DNA from the softer cellular structures of the inner cheek than the tougher exterior skin layers.
Plant cells (the onion skin cells) have a cell wall, while animal cells (cheek cells) only have the cell membrane.
not sure if this is what you mean but i kow that the skin on the inside of ur cheek is specialised. it is constantly wet and unafected by this.
Generally Human Cheek cells (as with skin cells) are dead on the outermost layers, and still alive on the deeper layers. So the cheek cells are dead even before you take them out of your mouth.
Just skin cells. Or not scientifically, you could, I guess, say just cheek cells
from quiting your job bc its impossible
Cheek cells are epithelial cells (Skin cells) and with all the things going on in your mouth, scraping cells with a toothpick would simply make the cells "fall off" onto the toothpick for sampling. (Epithelial cells are easy to collect)
The skin inside your mouth is composed of many cell layers that serve to protect your body by forming a barrier between the space within your mouth and the rest of the body. Because protection is a tough job, the skin is constantly making new cheek cells to replace those that fall of from the surface.