Humans have 23 pairs (46) chromosomes. The first 22 pairs are same in all Homo sapiens as these are somatic in nature. The last pair of chromosomes (aka the sex chromosome) are different in males and females in terms of size, genes etc. Females have the much larger X chromosome, whereas males have the smaller Y chromosome.
I was broady saying 3 types (Autosomal, sex, and mitochondrial). Your question can be interpreted in different ways, because it mentions 'cells of male/female'. A suggestion would be to specify each detail, whether you're asking about types of chromosomes w.r.t. structure, number etc. Thank you for your videos, helps in greater understanding 😊😊
Bahut bahut sundar sir ji.....❤
@@abhaysinghchauhan3212 thanx dear
बहुत बढ़िया
Thank you sir
Nice initiative sir😊
Thank you sir. Just learning
Humans have 23 pairs (46) chromosomes. The first 22 pairs are same in all Homo sapiens as these are somatic in nature. The last pair of chromosomes (aka the sex chromosome) are different in males and females in terms of size, genes etc. Females have the much larger X chromosome, whereas males have the smaller Y chromosome.
Here we are talking about the nucleolus and not the cell. Several mitochondrial chromosomes are also present in a human cell's cytoplasm.
The question is how many types of chromosomes are in men and women? 23 or 24?
@@drblthapliyal3735 Broadly speaking, 3. Autosomal chromosomes, Sex chromosomes, and Mitochondrial.
@@drblthapliyal3735 got it from your next video 😊
I was broady saying 3 types (Autosomal, sex, and mitochondrial). Your question can be interpreted in different ways, because it mentions 'cells of male/female'.
A suggestion would be to specify each detail, whether you're asking about types of chromosomes w.r.t. structure, number etc.
Thank you for your videos, helps in greater understanding 😊😊