It depends on the specie of animal. In general, more far is a specie (speaking in evolutionary terms) to human and more big is the difference. The similiarity of the DNA of human with the chimpanzee is around 97%.
The common belief is that everyone's DNA is 99.9% the same. However, a researcher from London claims that the difference could be as much as 10%, although I'm not sure whether that can be trusted or not.
I don't really know, but I am guessing we have the EXACT same DNA
99.9% of genetic material is the same in every one... Hope this helped :D
96% of our DNA is identical to Apes and Monkeys. Only 4% accounts for what we consider "human" to be.
1%
99.9%
99.9
a human cells have DNA and bacteria has plasmid
Yes they will look alike because of the cell's small structural and functional unit of an organism. Typically microscopic and consisting of cytoplasm; because all cells are a part of life so the only difference would be the color.
The DNA is the same chemical. The instructions coded for by the DNA (the proteins cells make using it) are however slightly different for every individual in a species and there are more differences between species.
human DNA are spliced into plasmid
You can't
Aside from different DNA, there isn't really much of a difference between animal cells and human cells. Human cells are an example of an animal cell.
no
The chimpanzees have 98% match with our DNA
69(;
50%
25% of the letters in human DNA are identical, the reason for this is that there are only four different letters
Bacterial DNA is single strand. Human DNA in the nucleus is double helix. So, with human DNA, the DNA must first split apart before an RNA molecule can read it.
yep well i think if they loook at their stomach acid if they didnt "dispose" the human.
Well... Human beings are animals, so you cannot really compare human cells to animal cells. But it's just the difference of DNA sequencing among different animals
DNA contains instructions inside the cell that establish whether an animal will be a tiger or a human. All living things with cells have DNA which are specific to their species.
Yes. The DNA is found in the nucleus of every cell. It's simply a case of extracting the DNA from the cell.
a human cells have DNA and bacteria has plasmid