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In the ADA sample items given here http://www.ada.org/prof/ed/testing/dat/dat_test_sampleitems.pdf , I was wondering if #28 is correct. I'm specifically talking about (4) A single chromosome usually carries two alleles of each gene.
I thought diploid organisms have 23 pairs of chromosomes, which means 46 chromosomes. Within each pair, one *chromosome* carries one allele of a gene, and its homologous chromosome carries the other. So how is it true that a single chromosome can carry 2 alleles of the same gene?
Someone please explain it to me, I'm confused 🙁
I thought diploid organisms have 23 pairs of chromosomes, which means 46 chromosomes. Within each pair, one *chromosome* carries one allele of a gene, and its homologous chromosome carries the other. So how is it true that a single chromosome can carry 2 alleles of the same gene?
Someone please explain it to me, I'm confused 🙁