Why do humans and yeast have the same base composition of DNA?
Here is the task again:
My question refers to task B3 and possibly B4.
For a grown man.
Is it really wrong to say that genetics determines most if not everything? And if you don't have good genetics, meaning you have a low IQ, a weak skeleton, weak muscles, weak joints, and maybe something innate that means you have much fewer chances in life than someone with very good genetics? Is it really…
I don't understand why rye can be fertilized. (It's in my book.) Does the rye grain only come after fertilization? (Which doesn't make any sense to me.)
As a homework assistant, we're supposed to label this picture of a fast-acting synapse, but I can't find any help online. Can someone help me? It's task 1.
The question was asked with exactly the same table recently. Here you find my answer:
A match is to be expected because all living beings have a common ancestor. The narrower two types are related, unso larger is the correspondence of the DNA sequences. In humans and chimpanzees, for example, almost 99% of the DNA agree. With humans and bananas still good 50%.
It is a riddle, my research brought the result that it is so, but why this is so cannot be explained by science
Read the contents of this link
https://www.forschung-und-wissen.de/messages/biology/hefe-response-der-dna-13372654
I’d say that’s pure coincidence.
The proportions of the base pairs do not say anything. (Other about the stability of the DNA.)
Random.