any thing is possible, in 1995 they made a human like ear grow out of a mouse from cow tissue, and they have sheep that grow livers that are 25 percent human. so probably in the next 70 years if the people who have trouble with change dont stop it, but progress is impossible to stop.
Splice is a 2009 Canadian-French science fiction-horror film directed by Vincenzo Natali and starring Adrien Brody and Sarah Polley, who portray a young scientist couple, choosing to introduce human DNA into their work of splicing animal genes.
Genes and chromosome numbers vary from animal to animal
No, because the genes are not similar enough to be compatible. The man's semen would just pass through the animal's body. But the animal would suffer severe mental trama.
The phenotype of an animal typically does not depend on the animal's genotype.
of course, it how the animal appears or act
The animal with the most genes is theorized to be the marbled lungfish, which has around 132,000 genes. This is significantly more than the average number of genes in most animals, which typically range from 20,000 to 40,000.
No, cloned animals do not lose their genes. The genetic material in a cloned animal is identical to the original animal it was cloned from. The process of cloning involves replicating the DNA of the original animal to create an exact genetic copy.
There are over 20,000 protein coding genes in the human genome. In addition many, perhaps most, of these genes can produce several different splice forms of protein, increasing the potential number of proteins manyfold. While no cell will express all possible proteins, they will at a minimum express several thousand of them. If you are looking for a specific protein, you need to provide more information.
no the animal in question like others can not change from thier actual blood into a cold blooded animal as it is impossible as the genes wont allow it as the co2 in animal cells combines with the carbon dioxide in the anger cells it isnot possible
Nothing. The DNA of one animal cannot be incorporated into that of another animal. This must be done by "gene splicing" where one part of normal DNA is chemically removed and replaced by a different gene (or genes) at a cellular level.
The genes
cLAYTON GRAM