If it does not match, than it is not that persons child.... adoption... or carrying another womans eggs
On very RARE occasions a person can be chimeric... and they "Are there own twin"
Basically they contain the cells, and therefor DNA for 2 different people... if the DNA making up the uterus and ovaries is not the same as the DNA used for testing, as it usually is not, then the results will show that the mother is not the mother.
Mitochondrial DNA, the DNA in the organelle called the mitochondria, it the DNA transmitted unchanged from mothers to their children.
Identical twins have the closest DNA match, as they share virtually all of their DNA. Siblings, on the other hand, share about 50% of their DNA. Parents and children also have a close DNA match, with children inheriting 50% of their DNA from each parent.
The Mothers-In-Law - 1967 The Match Game - 2.2 was released on: USA: 22 September 1968
A swab taken from you would contain your DNA and thus match your DNA. A swab taken from the alleged victim would contain the victim's DNA and thus match the victim's DNA. What would be shocking is if the swab taken from you didn't match your DNA, or the victim's swab didn't match their DNA. Therefor, it means that you are you, and the alleged victim is the alleged victim.
The chimpanzees have 98% match with our DNA
Yes
The Mothers-In-Law - 1967 The Match Game 2-2 was released on: USA: 22 September 1968
No, it varies and depends on the DNA.
To determine if a DNA match is maternal or paternal, one can look at the specific locations on the chromosomes where the match occurs. By comparing the shared segments of DNA with known genetic markers from the mother and father, it is possible to determine whether the match is on the maternal or paternal side.
Not necessarily DNA match could mean the person was there before but it does not necessarily mean they were part of the crime
Yes, fathers share some DNA with their children. Through a process called genetic recombination, parents pass on a combination of their DNA to their children. This DNA sharing is what determines similarities between a father and their child's genetic makeup.
A banana.