When one undergone blood transfusion, does his/her DNA fused to the donor's DNA?



Answers:
No--there will not be any transfer of DNA.for a couple reason.

First, blood is primarily red blood cells which enjoy no nuclear DNA in them. They are little more that sac of hemoglobin. So, the only DNA within a blood transfusion is from the white blood cells.

White blood cell in your blood stream do not divide and reproduce--special cell in your bone marrow create them.

So, when you receive a blood transfusion you do have a stranger's DNA floating around contained by your blood stream for a while, but it's not "active" DNA and it gets broken down and recycled close to any other molecule.

Interesting question.
No, the DNA isn't incorporated into the person's body. The transfused cell are present to help them live during the time of year when they need some extras, but next the cells die and are disposed of on the middle-of-the-road time-scale (for erythrocytes -- "red blood cells" that is in the region of 120 days).

In some types of bone marrow transplants, the cells that construct blood components are introduced into the recipient and they are incorporated into the bone marrow forever. Those cells live along-side the recipient own. making the person a "chimera" next to tissues from two genetic sources. But even then, the DNA does not combine.

Aloha
No.
No.
No bearing. just the blood cell of the donor run along with the patients blood cell. They must be of the same blood type, because except, T cells will authorize estrange blood cells as antigens attacking them
hah
No, the blood is eventually processed out of your body as adjectives blood is as it wears out and your body make more.
please read the source. dna is not transferred by blood transfusion.
no
your body just requests those little red ones
called cell
our body just loves to chomp through them up and make alien ones to.
that's why the blood is needed mostly.
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