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The ribosomes in bacterial cells do the same job as ribosomes in human and animal cells; they are "sites of translation (protein synthesis)".
a human cells have DNA and bacteria has plasmid
most of the antibiotics kill or inactivate bacteria by inhibitting the protein synthesis... protein synthesis consists of 'transcription' and 'translation'.. the translation process requiers mRNA and ribosomes.Human(eukaryotic) ribosome is different from bacterial(prokaryotic) ribosome... Antibiotics inhibit the protein synthesis by altering the ribosomal constitution.Since human ribosomes are different from bacterial ribosome,the substances which are harmful to bacterial ribosome doesn't harm human ribosomes.. Thus human cells are immune to antibiotics..
There is bacteria on the surface of your skin but they are not the same as your skin cells.
because they have more bacteria cells, since bacteria divide faster then somatic cells.
Humans are related to bacteria in that they are both a part of the Earth. They interact with one another, and while some bacteria is actually helpful to humans, many kinds of bacteria can be harmful.
In the human body, protein digestion ends in the small intestine. Protein is required to repair cells and to help new cells grow.
none
no
Specialization.
Predominantly multicellular not in bacteria but in human body • Cell contains a nucleus and other membrane bound organelles not in bacteria but in human body • DNA occurs in a circular form in bacteria only
According to Wikipedia, only 1013 cells in the human body are human cells. The rest, out of 1014, are bacteria. This gives a total of around 9 x 1013 or 90 trillion bacteria.