There are 22 autosomes in a normal cell, and one pair of sex chromosomes
Typically, 22 pairs or 44 chromosomes in humans. The number doesn't change between males and females whose only difference are the other 2 of the 46 total chromosomes, the aptly named sex chromosomes. So really the factor that decides how many autosomal chromosomes the organism has is what kind of organism it is (human? dog? cat? orangutan? moon jellyfish??)
5 billion
34
22 pair of autosomes and 1 pair of sex chromosomes. A male determines the sex with XY chromosomes and the female only has YY. 23; half of the normal 46 for a cell. This is so when the male and female cells meet, they will form a normal 46-chromosome cell.
A human sex cell has 22 autosomes and 1 sex chromosome (23 total).
23 - 22 autosomes + either an X or Y chromosome.
There are 22 pairs of autosomes in a human somatic cell.
In a normal diploid cell, there are 24 *different* chromosomes out the total of 46: there are 22 pairs of identical autosomes and 2 non-identical sex chromosomes.
It is different for different species but in Humans, each sperm (male gamete) has 23 chromosomes out of which 22 are autosomes and 1 is a sex chromosome.
There are 22 autosome pairs and one pair of sex chromosomes.
23 singles. Actually, for the astute, there are 22 autosomes and one sex chromosome.