No. Chromosomes are the simple form of DNA coiled into a rod shape containg genes and the plans for charastics. Blood cells are an entirly different cell
A red blood cells does not have any chromosomes. Red blood cells do not have a nucleus so it is impossible for them to have chromosomes.
No. Mature red blood cells have neither a nucleus nor chromosomes.
Human muscle cells contain 23 pairs of chromosomes.
No - Blood cells (Red Blood Cells) do not have a nucleus and therefore do not have any chromosomes. Pancreatic cells have a full chromosome compliment.
The Nucleus contains nearly all of the cell's DNA.
Of the formed elements in blood, only the white blood cells have chromosomes. Platelets are cell fragments, not cells, and red blood cells lose their chromosome-containing nuclei during the maturation process.
Chromosomes are the same no matter what gender you are, or what species, all cells have them. It is the information contained within those chromosomes that is different between cells.
the chromosomes
Gametes (sex celles) such as egg and sperm only contain one set of chromosomes this is is called a hapliod nucleus. when the 2 meet this forms a full pair of chromosomes and makes a dapliod nucleus.
The nucleus.
A white blood cell have 23 pairs [i.e 46] of chromosomes like other body cells but a germ cell always have 23 chromosomes[i.e half the number of normal body cells].
yes,