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Meiosis & Sexual Life Cycle Chapter 13. Slide 2 of 27 Definitions  Genetics – scientific study of heredity and hereditary variation  H eredity – transmission.

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Presentation on theme: "Meiosis & Sexual Life Cycle Chapter 13. Slide 2 of 27 Definitions  Genetics – scientific study of heredity and hereditary variation  H eredity – transmission."— Presentation transcript:

1 Meiosis & Sexual Life Cycle Chapter 13

2 Slide 2 of 27 Definitions  Genetics – scientific study of heredity and hereditary variation  H eredity – transmission of traits from one generation to the next one  Genes – Hereditary units that code for proteins  Gametes – Actual mechanism for hereditary transmission  Fertilization – Combining gametes  Locus – gene’s location on a chromosome

3 Slide 3 of 27 Asexual Reproduction  Single Parent  Reproduction occurs by mitosis, binary fission, budding, etc.  Offspring is exact copy (genetically)  Can be called a clone or a “Mini-me  Can get genetic variation, but rarely  Due to mutations  Common among unicellular organisms, but also found in multicellular organisms as well  Budding

4 Slide 4 of 27 Sexual reproduction  It takes 2 to tango = 2 parents  Unique combination of genes  Vary genetically from both parents and their siblings  May exhibit similarities to parents

5 Slide 5 of 27 Homologous Chromosomes  2 chromosomes that have same length, centromere position, and staining pattern  Autosomes  Non-sex chromosomes  Chromosomes that do not determine gender  Sex Chromosomes  Chromosomes that determine gender

6 Slide 6 of 27 Chromosomes  Human somatic cell = 44 autosomes + 2 sex chromosomes  Human gamete = 22 autosomes + 1 sex chromosome  Sex Chromosomes  Can be XX or XY  XX = Homologous chromosomes  XY = Not homologous chromosomes  Egg must contain X, sperm may contain X & Y  Hence, males determine the gender of offspring

7 Slide 7 of 27 Karyotype  Ordered display of chromosomes used to distinguish the number and size of homologous chromosomes

8 Slide 8 of 27

9 Slide 9 of 27 Unnecessary Censorship

10 Slide 10 of 27 Meiosis  2 Stages of Meiosis  Meiosis I & Meiosis II  Much of Meiosis resembles Mitosis  Chromosomes are replicated only once  B efore Meiosis I  4 daughter cells are produced

11 Slide 11 of 27 Meiosis: An Overview Assume that an organism has: 1 Homologous Pair = 2 Chromosomes (Diploid cell – 2n) STEP 1: Each of the chromosomes is replicated in Interphase STEP 2: Chromosome pairs of copies separate in Meiosis I (Haploid cell – n) BUT 2 copies of each one STEP 3: Each of the copies (sister chromatids) in a cell separates creating 4 haploid cells (Haploid cell with only 1 copy)

12 Slide 12 of 27 Repeat the Diagram but with 4 Chromosomes  The cell before interphase has 4 chromosomes and is diploid  Indicate how many chromosomes are present: 1. After interphase but before Meiosis 2. After Meiosis I 3. After Meiosis II

13 Slide 13 of 27 Questions?  If a cell has 10 chromosomes and is diploid, how many chromosomes (include what the book calls chromatids) are found at: A) the end of Meoisis I B) the end of Meiosis II

14 Slide 14 of 27

15 Slide 15 of 27 What is different in Prophase I? What is different in Anaphase I?

16 Slide 16 of 27 Meiosis I  Prophase I  Longest phase  Homologous pairs align  Crossing-Over may occur  Synapsis – pairing of homologous pairs tied tightly together  Tetrads form (4 chromosomes = 2 pairs)  Each tetrad has 1 or more chiasmata  Criss-crossed regions where crossing over has occurred

17 Slide 17 of 27 Meiosis I (Page 2)  Metaphase I  Tetrads are aligned at the metaphase plate  Each chromosome pair faces a pole  Anaphase I  Homologous chromosomes (composed of 2 copies of each chromosome called chromatids) are pulled apart

18 Slide 18 of 27 What is different between Meiosis I & II? This division is sometimes called the Mitotic division, why?

19 Slide 19 of 27

20 Slide 20 of 27 Meiosis vs. Mitosis  Tetrads align in Prophase I,  Chromosomes align in Prophase mitosis  Chromosomes position @ metaphase plate (Mitosis)  Tetrads position @ metaphase plate (Meiosis)  Homologues separate in Meiosis I  Sister chromatids separate in Meiosis II & Mitosis  Crossing over = Meiosis NOT mitosis

21 Slide 21 of 27 MitosisMeiosis DNA replicates in interphase 1 division No synapsis 2 Diploid cells Genetically identical cells Responsible for: -- Zygote growth into multicellular organism DNA only replicates in Pre- meiotic interphase 2 divisions Synapsis occurs during prophase I forming tetrads Crossing over occurs now 4 haploid cells Genetically different cells Responsible for: -- Gamete production -- Genetic variation

22 Slide 22 of 27 Genetic Diversity  The reason for meiosis + sexual reproduction  Mutations are the original source of genetic diversity  3 main sources of Genetic Diversity 1. Independent Assortment of Chromosomes 2. Crossing Over 3. Random Fertilization

23 Slide 23 of 27  Each daughter cell has a 50% chance of getting maternal chromosome (or its copy)  Similarly, 50% chance of getting paternal chromosome (or its copy)  Independent assortment - each chromosome is positioned independently of the other chromosomes

24 Slide 24 of 27  When homologous pairs are formed in Prophase I, a recombinant chromosome can be formed -- A chromosome that has DNA from 2 different parents  2 chromosome segments trade places (cross over) producing chromosomes with new combos of maternal & paternal genes  1-3 times per chromosome in humans  Increases genetic variation

25 Slide 25 of 27 Random Fertilization  Egg + sperm cells are genetically different from parent cells  Their combination (fertilization) increases variation even more


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