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.
The human sperm cell has 23 chromosomes. White blood cells have 46 chromosomes. Mature red blood cells to not contain a nucleus, and therefore has no chromosomes. Platelets are cell fragments and also do not contain nuclei.
Chromosomes are found in the nucleus of a cell.
No. Red Blood and some other cells do not have chromosomes.
23 pairs and 46 in all like any other body cell except gametes and red blood cells (blood cells have no chromosomes because they have no nucleus hope this helps
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 formed element that does not have chromosomes is the red blood cell (erythrocyte). Red blood cells are lacking in a nucleus and do not contain chromosomes or genetic material. This feature allows them to maximize their capacity for carrying oxygen.
No, it cannot divide since mature red blood cells have no nucleus. there are no chromosomes to replicate.
Red blood cells have no genetic information in them. White blood cells have the usual diploid number 46 (23 pairs). Sperm cells are haploid, so have 23 chromosomes.
Sickle cell disease is one of many diseases of the red blood cell.
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.
There are 23 pairs of chromosomes in all about 100 trillion body cells minus 25 trillion red blood cells and gametes. Red blood cells have no nucleus and so no chromosomes and gametes have half of them.
There is only one normal type of red blood cell.