Alphagene
09-10-1999, 01:12 PM
There are a *huge* number of possible DNA combinations but the vast majority of which don't encode squat. Plus, DNA comes in different lengths depending on the organism. But I'm assuming you're talking humans here.
Roughly speaking, the human genome has three billion base pairs (IIRC) and each base pair can be one of four nucleotides so that's 8x10^37 possible combinations of nucleotides. But an extremely small percentage of those would actually "encode" a human. Or anything at all.
Still, allowing for genes that must remain mostly intact in order for you to still be a human, there's still a whole heck of lot of room for mutations, insertions, deletions.
I'd say if you run into someone with identical DNA, your an identical twin or you've been cloned. Or you are a clone.
Now the odds of someone having an identical DNA "fingerprint" as you is more common. But still remote.
Roughly speaking, the human genome has three billion base pairs (IIRC) and each base pair can be one of four nucleotides so that's 8x10^37 possible combinations of nucleotides. But an extremely small percentage of those would actually "encode" a human. Or anything at all.
Still, allowing for genes that must remain mostly intact in order for you to still be a human, there's still a whole heck of lot of room for mutations, insertions, deletions.
I'd say if you run into someone with identical DNA, your an identical twin or you've been cloned. Or you are a clone.
Now the odds of someone having an identical DNA "fingerprint" as you is more common. But still remote.