Metaphase I Encompasses The Alignment of Paired Chromosomes Along The Center
Metaphase I Encompasses The Alignment of Paired Chromosomes Along The Center
Metaphase I Encompasses The Alignment of Paired Chromosomes Along The Center
Heredity 1
1. What is meiosis? Describe the importance and the number of chromosomes and
number of daughter cells it results to.
Meiosis is a process where a single cell divides twice to produce four cells containing half the
original amount of genetic information. This is to shuffle genetic information and cut the cellular
chromosome number in half, from 46 chromosomes to 23 chromosomes. In this way, when an
egg and sperm cell combine during fertilization, the resulting embryo will inherit the appropriate
amount of unique genetic information from each parent.
13. Perform a test cross. Predict the genotype and the genotype and phenotype of
offspring.
14. How do monohybrid and dihybrid cross differ? Explain
monohybrid cross is a cross between first-generation offspring of parents who differ in one trait
while a dihybrid cross is a cross between first-generation offspring of parents who differ in two
traits.
1. Define the terms gene and allele and explain how they differ.
A gene is a portion of DNA that determines a certain trait. An allele is a specific form of
a gene. Genes are responsible for the expression of traits while alleles are responsible
for the variations in which a given trait can be expressed.
16. What is cell division? Explain the two stages of cell division
Cell division is the process by which a parent cell divides into two or more daughter cells. The
cell cycle can be separated into two major phases that alternate with each other: interphase,
during which the cell grows, prepares for mitosis and duplicates its DNA, and the mitotic (M)
phase, in which the cell divides into two genetically identical daughter cells.
19. Where does mitosis occur and how many chromosomes and daughter cells will if
produce?