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Most chromosomes will make up a karyotype. It is important that you list a little more information to answer this question.

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11y ago

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What is human karyotype?

A human karyotype is the number and appearance of chromosomes in the nucleus of a human cell. It is usually depicted as a systematized arrangement of chromosome pairs according to their size, shape, and banding pattern. A normal human karyotype includes 46 chromosomes, with 22 pairs of autosomes and one pair of sex chromosomes.


What shows chromosomes present in a cell?

A karyotype is a picture of all the chromosomes in a person's cells. A human has 46 chromosomes in all but sex cells.


How many autosomes are present in a normal human karyotype?

There are 46 chromosomes in a human Karyotype.


What is a karyotype and what type of mutation does it show?

A karyotype is a picture of the chromosomes in a cell. For example, a human cell has 46 chromosomes. In the karyotype, 23 pairs of chromosomes will be shown (23 x 2 = 46). A karyotype can show different types of mutations, depending on which chromosome it affects. For example, Down Syndrome is a trisomy in chromosome 21, so there will be THREE instead of two chromosome 21s. You can research more mutations shown by chromosomes in a karyotype.


How many chromosomes are in the human karyotype?

23 pairs


What is a karyotype and how can it can be used to study human chromosomes?

Gayness


How would the karyotype of an organism that asexually differ from a human karyotype?

The karyotype of the asexual organism would not contain homologous chromosomes


How would the karyotype of an organism the reproduces asexually differ from a human karyotype?

The karyotype of the asexual organism would not contain homologous chromosomes


How would the karyotype of an organism that reproduces asexually differe from a human karyotype?

The karyotype of the asexual organism would not contain homologous chromosomes


How would the karyotype of an organism reproduces asexually differ from a human karyotype?

The karyotype of the asexual organism would not contain homologous chromosomes


How would a karyotype from an organism that reproduces asexually differ from a human karyotype?

The karyotype of the asexual organism would not contain homologous chromosomes


How would the karyotype of an organism that reproduces asexually differ from an human karyotype?

The karyotype of the asexual organism would not contain homologous chromosomes