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The Virus hides in the Hosts Cells DNA
It is much like doing it with plant cells. You insert DNA into the egg cell. Then once in the cell the enzymes usually responsible for DNA repair help insert forein DNA into the chromosomes of the cells that have been injected.:)
Mutagens cause a change in DNA and by this way they can produce mutant DNA repair enzymes.
DNA polymerase
No. Radiation can cause rearrangements or alterations in the DNA. Additionally, radiation can cause improper gene replication, resulting in minor duplication and other errors.
yes but in hosts by tempering with hosts cell DNA/RNA
No. Injecting avian DNA into your body would not give you wings, nor should it affect your DNA.
By modifying the male side of the DNA and directly injecting it into the Ova
The two ways that viruses cause infection are by lytic infection and lysogenic infection. The virus can enter into a cell, make a copy of itself and the cause the cell to burst in a lytic infection. When a virus embeds its DNA into the DNA of a host cell and replicates, it is a lysogenic infection.
By injecting mice with pneumococcus bacteria that had first been heated, Griffith proved genetic material was environmentally heritable. Please see link below for detailed treatment.
by injecting complex DNA or RNA in the nucleus of cell. From Kamaljyoti Talukdar
The lysogynistic cycle where they insert their DNA/RNA into the hosts genetic material for many rounds of their own replication along with the hosts replication.
Adenoviruses are DNA viruses (small infectious agents) that cause upper respiratory tract infections, conjunctivitis, and other infections in humans
The Virus hides in the Hosts Cells DNA
The Virus hides in the Hosts Cells DNA
The Virus hides in the Hosts Cells DNA
Griffith was trying to show the transformation of DNA in his experiment where DNA was transfered enabling the viable cell of bacteria to non- viable.