Meiosis & Sexual Reproduction "Cell Reduction": Mitosis 2n 2n
Meiosis & Sexual Reproduction "Cell Reduction": Mitosis 2n 2n
Meiosis & Sexual Reproduction "Cell Reduction": Mitosis 2n 2n
MITOSIS 2n 2n 2n MITOSIS 2n
zygote
n egg sperm
Review
Mitosis
Prophase: Sister chromatids appear Metaphase: Chromosomes line up Anaphase: Chromatids separate and chromosomes move towards opposite poles Telophase: Nucleus appears
Cell Division
Cell division increases the number of somatic cells (body cells) through
Mitosis: Division of the nucleus
somatic cell
Humans
have two different sex chromosomes, X and Y, & 22 other pairs of matching chromosomes, called autosomes
Chromosome analogy
Chromosomes
Organisms usually have them in pairs In some systems (e.g., humans), females have all matching pairs and males have an odd pair!
XX XY
A karyotype is an orderly illustration of chromosomes Homologous chromosomes are matching pairs of chromosomes Homologous mean same
The life cycle of a multicellular organism is the sequence of stages leading from the adults of one generation to the adults of the next
Egg cell Sperm cell Meiosis Fertilization Diploid zygote (2n = 46) Multicellular diploid adults (2n = 46)
Humans
Their
gametes (sex cells: sperm, egg) are haploid, having only one set of chromosomes
Halves
In
diploid body cells chromosomes occur in pairs Humans have 23 different types of chromosomes Diploid cells have two of each type Chromosomes of the same type are said to be homologous
a.
sister chromatids
duplication
duplication
centromere
They have the same length Their centromeres are positioned in the same place One came from the father (the paternal homolog) the other from the mother (the maternal homolog) When stained, they show similar banding patterns A location on one homologue contains gene for the same trait that occurs at this locus on the other homologue
paternal chromosome maternal chromosome
chromosome
homologous pair
chromosome
b.
Although the genes may code for different variations of that trait Alternate forms of a gene are called alleles
meiosis
Interphase
Centrosomes (with centriole pairs)
Diploid (2n) organisms produce haploid (n) gametes Two consecutive divisions occur after interphase, meiosis I and meiosis II
Nuclear envelope
Chromatin
Chromosomes duplicate
Meiosis I
Meiosis I: Homologous chromosomes separate Telophase I and Cytokinesis Cleavage furrow
Prophase I
Sites of crossing over Spindle
Metaphase I
Microtubules attached to Chromosomes
Anaphase I
Sister chromatids remain attached
Sister chromatids
Tetrad
Centromere Tetrads line up Pairs of homologous chromosomes split up Two haploid cells form: chromosomes are still double
Meiosis II
Meiosis II: Sister chromatids separate Prophase II Metaphase II Anaphase II Telophase II and Cytokinesis
During another round of cell division, the sister chromatids finally separate; four haploid daughter cells result, containing single chromosomes
Meiosis
Prophase
Prophase I
Metaphase
Metaphase I
Anaphase Telophase
Sister chromatids separate during anaphase
2n
2n
Homologous chromosomes separate during anaphase I; sister chromatids remain together No further chromosomal duplication; sister chromatids separate during anaphase II
Anaphase I Telophase I
Haploid n=2
Meiosis II
Metaphase of meiosis II
Gametes
Combination a
Combination b
Combination c
Combination d
Crossing Over
Homologous chromosomes rub together and exchange genetic information Genetic recombination occurs
Metaphase I
Spindle microtubules
Metaphase II
Gametes
Recombinant chromosomes
Four haploid daughter cells centrioles nucleolus centromere sister chromatids synapsis
chromosome duplication 2n = 4 2n = 4
n=2
Animation
Animation
Animation
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22
WHAT HAPPENS WHEN THE PROCESS DOESNT FOLLOW THE TEXT BOOK?
Is a condition where an individual has an extra chromosome 21; hence the name: trisomy 21 Nondisjunction: Chromosome pairs fail to separate during meiosis
Kleinfelter Syndrome Male, sterile (small testes), can have female features like enlarged breasts 3 or more Xs also considered Kleinfelter, but these individuals are more likely to also be mentally retarded XYY may be taller than average, otherwise normal male XXX Metafemale, sometimes infertile but otherwise normal
Short stature Web of skin in neck area Sterile Poor development of secondary sex characteristics such as breasts
Turner syndrome
POLYPLOIDY
Polyploids
(many sets of chromosomes) Have more than two sets of homologous chromosomes in each somatic (body) cell May occur when meiosis fails and gametes (sex cells) are produced via mitosis This example results in tetraploid (4n) offspring Are sometimes infertile Are sometimes new kinds of life (esp. in plants) capable of reproduction
Make up at least half of flowering plant species Wheat, strawberries, potato, apple Sometimes occur among animals Some fish and amphibians Rare mammalian example:
Rat species from Chile
POLYPLOIDY
http://www.bing.com/videos/watch/video/meiosis/c08404a18091d849525bc08404a18091