A population of cells carrying a desired plasmid is called a transformed population.
A group of cells that develops from a single original cell is called a clone.
An exact duplicate of an organism is called a clone. This is created through asexual reproduction methods such as cloning or cellular replication.
Cloning to produce embryonic stem cells is called therapeutic cloning. This process involves creating a clone of a donor’s cells to generate embryonic stem cells that can be used for medical research and potential treatments.
no
A population of cells carrying a desired plasmid is called a transformed population.
clone. Clone is the answer!
A group of cells that develops from a single original cell is called a clone.
A clone that has the exact same genes as the organism that made it is called a genetic clone.
An exact duplicate of an organism is called a clone. This is created through asexual reproduction methods such as cloning or cellular replication.
Memory Cells
no. stem cells can clone A cell that's put around it, like a heart cell or pancreas cell but it can't clone an entire person (though it would aid the process).
Cloning to produce embryonic stem cells is called therapeutic cloning. This process involves creating a clone of a donor’s cells to generate embryonic stem cells that can be used for medical research and potential treatments.
A plasmid is a small molecule of DNA that replicate independently within the cell. A population of cells carrying a desired plasmid is called a clone.
no..... no animal can clone themselves, there are cells in the animal that clone themselves, but an animal cannot just split into two of the same animal.
You can get it from the original's cell nucleus from one of its cells.
Cloud is a 'Sephiroth Clone', but not a clone of Sephiroth. In game terms, a 'Sephiroth Clone' was simply someone injected with Jenova's cells, and who Sephiroth was able to control indirectly due to his own link with Jenova. It does not imply they are a clone of him, in the traditional sense of the word.