If you took the entire DNA from all of your cells and uncoiled it it would:
Somebody took Holly's class.
Yes they are the same size, our cells and elephant cells are all animal cells, the cells within our bodies differ in size according to their function as do any other multicellular organisms, but if you took a cell from the heart of a human or from an elephant they would be close to each other in size.
Jupiter in 1994 it took an entire week for the 21 pieces to crash into Jupiter
If you grow transformed bacteria containing a recombinant DNA plasmid without an antibiotic, you would likely observe that only a small proportion of the cells that successfully took up the plasmid will survive, while the majority of non-transformed cells will also grow. However, the transformed cells may not express the gene of interest or provide any selective advantage, resulting in no significant difference in growth compared to the non-transformed cells. Over time, the population would likely consist mostly of non-transformed cells, as they do not require any selective pressure to thrive.
ofcourse not. they are different plants and youre not even sure if the cells still survived when you removed it.
You would die if you took out all of your blood cells
Yes, you find cells in everything.
yes
take =לקח (lakach) In order to conjugate the past tense form "took", you would need to provide the entire sentence. for example: I took = lakachti we took = lakachnu
Like dominoes the entire region would fall.
culturing cells to find out which took the gene of interest.
it took ten years to film the seven books
Assuming the question really is "Who took the first picture of the entire Great Wall of China" I do not see how this is possible, given the length of the wall. It would be possible to take a picture of the entire Great Wall from a low-orbiting satelite or space shuttle, except portions of the wall no longer exist, so it would not be the "complete" wall.
the same thing that would happen to you if you took an entire bottle of vitamins over fertilizing is just as bad as under fertilizing
In the 1950s with computers that took up entire rooms.
In the 1950s with computers that took up entire rooms.
Aeverthing living has has cells! im an 8th grader and took that course last year!