syedali73
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I work with monkeys (mostly Macaques and Chimps) because we are developing novel therapeutic modalities against HIV/AIDS. Non-human primates such as Macaques and Chimps are closest to the humans YET they are not human. I am not sure how correct it would be to compare Chimp's age with that of human with respect to their diet. Non-human primates look like humans but they are far from humans and mere presence of genes common between the two species actually proves nothing. Their metabolism, diseases, responses to drugs etc are all pretty different and hence many drugs tested in the monkeys fail to work in the humans and vice versa.
Another example is the mouse. On average, the protein-coding regions of the mouse and human genomes are 85 percent identical YET mouse and human are so different in just about every respect, from size to age, intelligence to susceptibility to diseases.
Another example is the mouse. On average, the protein-coding regions of the mouse and human genomes are 85 percent identical YET mouse and human are so different in just about every respect, from size to age, intelligence to susceptibility to diseases.