1 for bacterial cell to produce a human protein
The hamstring tendon insertion is located at the back of the knee in the human body.
The distal bicep insertion is located at the radial tuberosity in the forearm of the human body.
The distal bicep tendon insertion is located on the radius bone in the forearm of the human body.
it has more human cells actually the human body has more bacterial cells. Although it may seem more likely that the human body would have more human cells than bacterial cells. -Vasillisa
The long head biceps tendon insertion is located in the shoulder joint of the human body.
The hamstring tendon insertion is located at the back of the knee in the human body.
The lower trapezius insertion is located on the spine of the scapula in the human body.
The distal bicep insertion is located at the radial tuberosity in the forearm of the human body.
Their structure is one.A human lung cell is eukaryotic and part of the multicellular structure, the lung.Bacterial cells are prokaryotic and unicellular.Virus is a fragment of protein and nucleic acid that forms a infectious structure.
the bacterial cell reproduces the bacterial chromosome that the human gene codes for.
The distal bicep tendon insertion is located on the radius bone in the forearm of the human body.
it has more human cells actually the human body has more bacterial cells. Although it may seem more likely that the human body would have more human cells than bacterial cells. -Vasillisa
The long head biceps tendon insertion is located in the shoulder joint of the human body.
Yes, if the human has a bacterial infection, it is possible for that infection to be transferred to the dog. I will point out, however, that this is rather rare.
That they have both DNA Bacterial DNA is a (closed) circle, those of human is lineair (straight) if you stretch it. Bacterial DNA does not have Proteines, Human DNA has Proteines. Bacteria have also RNA The DNA of bacteria is easy to reach , those of human not.
The biceps tendon insertion is located at the top of the radius bone in the forearm, near the elbow joint.
bacterial