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.
Your chromosomes contain your genetic material.
Yes. You have 23 pairs of chromosomes in all the body cells except the red blood cells. Red blood cells do not have nucleus in them.
Genes
9 chromosomes
like ever other cell in the body it has 46 Chromosomes or 2 sets of 23 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ A mature RBC has no nucleus. Therefore, it has no chromosome. The average life span of a RBC is 120 days.
Controls your blood sugar
It has 46 chromosomes because it is a body cell. All body cells have 46 chromosomes except our sex cells, which have 23. Body cells are refered to as 2n, or diploid, while sex cells are just n, or haploid. When sex cells combine they form another regular body cell, because the chromosomes come together.
Sex cells contain half the number of chromosomes that body cells contain.
The pancreas controls the insulin and blood sugar levels in your body. Without a pancreas, you would be a type-1 diabetic.
The pancreas, it releases insulin.
chromosomes contain mitochondria, which acts just like a battery.
Every cell in the body has chromosomes within a membrane bound organelle called the nucleus. There are 23 chromosomes total and all cells in the body (with a few exceptions) have two copies of each (one from mother and one from father). Exceptions to this include red blood cells (which have no nuclei) and gametes such as females' eggs and males' sperm which only contain one copy of chromosomes.