Wednesday, November 30, 2011

In blood transfusions, what happen to the donor's DNA once it's inside another person's body?

It stays
It does not cause any problem.
If the blood groups are matched, nearby wont be any reaction, which are triggered by donor's incompatible cell & antigens in the recepients body.
The donor DNA within the blood cellS just stays as it be, & leaves the body as those cells complete their existence span in die.
After that, receiver does not retain any of the donor's DNA.
The doners DNA is miniscule in quantum compared to the blood surrounded by the body. The white blood corpulses slowly override this microscopic presence, and removed from the blood stream.
The red blood cells don't enjoy a nucleus/ no DNA, and the white are in smaller numbers, w. compatibility established at hand is usually no reaction.
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