23 million
The malaria parasite, specifically Plasmodium falciparum, has a haploid genome consisting of 14 chromosomes. These chromosomes vary in size and contain the genetic material necessary for the parasite's life cycle and pathogenicity. Other species of Plasmodium may have different chromosome counts, but P. falciparum's 14 chromosomes are the most commonly referenced.
More are being isolated all the time, but here's a list of 20 commonly known ones: 3D77G8D10D6Dd2FC27FCC-2/HainanFCR-3/FMGHB3IGH-CR14Indochina I/CDCK1NF54NF7RAJ116RO-33Santa LuciaSenegal_V34.04VS/1W2
four base pairs
Malaria is caused by organisms of the genus Plasmodium, a protist that infects human red blood cells. Human malaria includes the species Plasmodium falciparum, P. vivax, P. ovale, and P. malariae. The species responsible for the most deaths due to malaria is P. falciparum.
there are five base pairs in klinefelter syndrome
There are three base pairs in each amino acid. If you have 1500 base pairs you would have 500 amino acids.
The human genome consists of about 3 billion base pairs.
There are approximately 3 billion base pairs in the human genome.
A gene typically contains thousands to millions of base pairs.
There are 3 billion base pairs per cell in a human diploid.
The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae has a genome size of approximately 12.1 million base pairs.
The number of base pairs formed by 8 DNA nucleotides is 8.