A human liver cell would have the same number of chromosomes (46) after undergoing mitosis as it did before. Mitosis is a type of cell division that results in two daughter cells with the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
Yes, the nucleus of a cell in your thigh muscle and the nucleus of a cell in your brain both contain the same set of genes. However, different genes are activated in different types of cells, leading to the development of specialized muscle or brain cells with distinct functions.
The DNA in all of your cells is the same because it contains the same genetic information. While brain cells and heart cells have different functions and characteristics, they both derive from the same original DNA template during development. The unique expression of genes in each type of cell leads to their specialized functions and structures.
Liver cells and skull cells have the same DNA because all cells in the body contain the same genetic information in their DNA. However, the expression of different genes in liver cells and skull cells leads to their specialization and different functions. This specialization is due to the unique combination of genes that are turned on or off in each cell type.
Both human liver cells and human nerve cells will have the same number of chromosomes, which is 46. This is because all body cells in humans (somatic cells) have the same number of chromosomes, which are inherited from the parents and not altered during differentiation into different cell types.
The nucleus acts a the brain of a cell.
DNA
It is true thatÊthe DNA in the skin cell have the same sequence of bases as the DNA in the brain cell of the same organism. The sequence of the bases should be the same in all cells of an organism.
A human liver cell would have the same number of chromosomes (46) after undergoing mitosis as it did before. Mitosis is a type of cell division that results in two daughter cells with the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
The brain.
Same as any other food ... it's all processed in the intestines and liver long before it get anywhere near the brain.
Yes, the nucleus of a cell in your thigh muscle and the nucleus of a cell in your brain both contain the same set of genes. However, different genes are activated in different types of cells, leading to the development of specialized muscle or brain cells with distinct functions.
all the stomatic cell having the same type of cell cycle but different type of differentiation.
The DNA in all of your cells is the same because it contains the same genetic information. While brain cells and heart cells have different functions and characteristics, they both derive from the same original DNA template during development. The unique expression of genes in each type of cell leads to their specialized functions and structures.
Yes. In an individual, almost all cells contain DNA (Red Blood Cells do not). That DNA is tightly wound like you would twist a drawstring, and kept tightly coiled as chromosomes. Since chromosomes can be found in a cheek cell, a liver cell (hepatocyte), and almost all other cells, they all contain the same chromosomes, which inevitably have the same genes. What makes cheek cells different from liver cells is which genes are turned on and off. Cheek cells have different genes turned on compared to liver cells.
A single cell fungus has about the same number of cells as you have in your brain!
Nucleus is the control center of the cell. It contains the cell's genetic material (DNA), which carries instructions for making proteins and controlling cell functions. The nucleus also regulates gene expression, cell growth, and cell division.