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A. Are a set of chromosomes that the cell receives from one parent.
B Do not include sex chromosomes
C Were form when they were separated during anaphase
D Carry the same gene sequence
E Always carry identical variants of genes

I know the answer is not A nor D nor B

2007-02-25 08:43:14 · 2 answers · asked by SPHINX 1 in Science & Mathematics Biology

2 answers

Homologous chromosomes are chromosomes in a biological cell that pair (synapse) during meiosis, or alternatively, non-identical chromosomes that contain information for the same biological features and contain the same genes at the same loci but possibly different genetic information, called alleles, at those genes. For example, two chromosomes may have genes encoding eye color, but one may code for brown eyes, the other for blue.

2007-02-25 08:51:48 · answer #1 · answered by carin1983 2 · 0 0

you're ideal in asserting that a chromatid is a million/2 of a replicated chromosome. yet the two chromatids are held mutually on the centromere, and that they are same (they're replicates). they do no longer seem to be "chromosomes" till the centromere splits, and that they alter into separate. Homologues are actually not same because of the fact, even however they have an identical affiliation of genes, they're from diverse organisms (the dad and mom); many of their alleles are ameliorations of those genes.

2016-10-01 23:32:56 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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