White blood cells have 46 chromosomes. Mature red blood cells do not contain a nucleus, and therefore has no chromosomes. Platelets are cell fragments and also do not contain nuclei. *Most human cells normally contain 46 chromosomes. Forty-six is our diploid number. Our sex cells or gametes contain 23 chromosomes. Twenty-three is our haploid number.
Humans have 46 chromosomes. This means they will produce sex-cells (sperm and ovum/egg) which have 23 chromosomes.
46 in a human body cell. 23 in the sex cell e.g. sperm and egg cell (gametes) when they combine you end up with 46 again.
46 single chromosomes which is 23 pairs of chromosomes in one human body cell.
The number of chromosomes in a body cell is typically 46 in humans. This consists of 22 pairs of autosomes and one pair of sex chromosomes (XX for females, XY for males).
A human cell normally has 46 chromosomes, with 23 pairs - one set of chromosomes inherited from the mother and one set from the father.
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There are 46 chromosomes in each human body cell, with 23 chromosomes inherited from each parent. This includes 22 pairs of autosomes and 1 pair of sex chromosomes (XX for females, XY for males).
Each human cell has 46 chromosomes divided into 23 pair.
Humans have 46 chromosomes. This means they will produce sex-cells (sperm and ovum/egg) which have 23 chromosomes.
In a normal Human body cell (not a gamete) there are 46 chromosomes. This is not the same number of chromosomes in our bodies, only in one cell, and there are trillions of cells in the human body. In a gamete (a sperm cell or egg cell) there are 23 chromosomes. When the sperm and egg cell nuclei fuse in fertilisation, a diploid cell of 46 chromosomes is produced.
A human lung cell has 46 chromosomes, as do all human body cells.
46 in a human body cell. 23 in the sex cell e.g. sperm and egg cell (gametes) when they combine you end up with 46 again.
46 single chromosomes which is 23 pairs of chromosomes in one human body cell.
The gametes must have half as many chromosomes as normal body cells because they unite to form a zygote, which is the first body cell of the new organism. For example, human body cells have 46 chromosomes and human gametes (sperm and egg cells) have 23 chromosomes. When the sperm fertilizes the egg, the zygote will have 46 chromosomes, and is the first body cell of the new human.
The number of chromosomes in a body cell is typically 46 in humans. This consists of 22 pairs of autosomes and one pair of sex chromosomes (XX for females, XY for males).
A human cell normally has 46 chromosomes, with 23 pairs - one set of chromosomes inherited from the mother and one set from the father.
They do not have pairs since they are haploid. They have 23 single chromosomes.