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A change in ocean current causes the climate on an island to
A change in ocean current causes the climate on an island to

... If the body cells of an organism have 10 chromosomes, then the reproductive cells produced during meiosis would have? On what structure are genes found? The function of chromosomes is directly related to? What is heredity? What makes up chromosomes? How can the process of meiosis be described? Mitos ...
Meiosis - Problem
Meiosis - Problem

... page 1 ...
Prophase I - gcaramsbiology
Prophase I - gcaramsbiology

... Spindle fibers condense, causing the sister chromatids to separate. Each chromatid is now a “daughter chromosome.” ...
Main Concept #3: Describe how the process of DNA replication
Main Concept #3: Describe how the process of DNA replication

... o Gametes (egg and sperm) have only one set of chromosomes = HAPLOID (n)  contain only one set of genes Meiosis I – prior to meiosis I, each chromosome is replicated o Chromosomes line-up similar to mitosis, except the homologous chromosomes form a tetrad (4 chromatids)  Occurs during prophase I  ...
Keystone Anchor 5 Answers
Keystone Anchor 5 Answers

... o Gametes (egg and sperm) have only one set of chromosomes = HAPLOID (n)  contain only one set of genes Meiosis I – prior to meiosis I, each chromosome is replicated o Chromosomes line-up similar to mitosis, except the homologous chromosomes form a tetrad (4 chromatids)  Occurs during prophase I  ...
Meiosis and Mendel`s Law of Segregation
Meiosis and Mendel`s Law of Segregation

... Gametes (sperm and eggs) are produced from germ cells (the progenitors of sperm and eggs) through the process of meiosis. Meiosis is the process in which a diploid germ cell, diploid meaning that the cell has two sets of chromosomes – one from each parent, first replicates its DNA and then undergoes ...
Cross-dressing or Crossing-over: Sex Testing of Women Athletes
Cross-dressing or Crossing-over: Sex Testing of Women Athletes

... Stages of Meiosis • Meiosis (in animals) produces 4 haploid cells from 1 diploid cell. • At the end of the first division (Meiosis I) the 2 cells are already haploid. • The second division (Meiosis II) splits the 2 sister (identical, replicated DNA) chromatids to 1 chromatid. Animation: http://www. ...
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... which there is no extra DNA replication step. Instead of having a pair of genes (as in a diploid cell), there is only one copy of each gene (a haploid cell). This one copy of genetic information produces gametes of either sperm or eggs. Thus, only one copy of a gene is passed on to each gamete. It i ...
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CHAPTER NINE: MITOSIS NOTES PT. 1 What Happens When A

... When a cell is preparing to divide, chromatin condense into chromosomes The human somatic cell (body cell) has 46 chromosomes = diploid (2n) The human gamete (sex cell - an egg and sperm cell) only has 23 chromosomes = haploid (n) Each chromosome may contain thousands of genes ...
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... mitosis during which the centromeres split & individual chromatids move toward the poles. (AAA – in ANAPHASE chromosomes are pulled APART & move AWAY to opposite sides). ...
ORLANDO BIOLOGY ~ LESSON PLANS Competencies for 21st
ORLANDO BIOLOGY ~ LESSON PLANS Competencies for 21st

... 2. Goals & Objectives: Students will know that meiosis is a process by which cells reduce their genetic material by half and is a part of sexual reproduction. That variation is introduced in meiosis through the process of crossing over and independent assortment of chromosomes. Students will be able ...
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Notes for Cell Cycle

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Ingenious Genes Curriculum Links for AQA GCSE Combined

... cell divides twice to form four gametes, each with a single set of chromosomes • all gametes are genetically different from each other. Gametes join at fertilisation to make a new cell with the normal number of chromosomes. 4.4.3.1 Chromosomes and genes Explain the following terms: gamete, chromosom ...
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... All chromosomes have become lined up at the spindle equator. At this stage of mitosis (and of the cell cycle), they are most tightly condensed ...
Cell Cycle - Madison County Schools
Cell Cycle - Madison County Schools

... the centrosomes move to opposite poles, and the chromosomes condense into pairs. • 2. Metaphase 1- the pairs of chromosomes line up along the midline of the cell. • 3. Anaphase 1- pairs of chromosomes move to opposite poles. • 4. Telophase 1- the nuclear membrane can reforms and the cell starts to d ...
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... 15. What is happening to the cell membrane and cytoplasm at this stage? Late Telophase 16. How many cells are there now? 17. How many chromosomes are in each cell? 18. How many chromosomes are in a human cell? ...
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Cell Growth and Division (Ch 10) Test REVIEW

... 12. How does cytokinesis differ in animal cells from plant cells? 13. Refer to the diagram on the right. During which phases of mitosis would you be able to observe duplicated chromosomes? Unduplicated? 14. When are the chromosomes duplicated? 15. Suppose you have a cell with 46 chromosomes. How man ...
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Genetics: The Science of Heredity

...  Process by which chromosome pairs separate and are distributed to two different cells  The resulting “sex” cells (sperm & egg) have only half the number of chromosomes as those in normal cells  Each sex cell has one chromosome from each original pair  Each chromosome in each sex cell has one al ...
S90 Topic 5 DNA, genes and the genetic code, meiosis and mitosis
S90 Topic 5 DNA, genes and the genetic code, meiosis and mitosis

... Did you know? The human genome contains about 3.0 x 109 pairs of bases. Humans have approximately 30 000 genes, and a typical gene has 3000 base pairs! Think about it!  http://learn.genetics.utah.edu/content/begin/tour/ Click on “What is a Gene?” There are 2 types of cell division: Mitosis and Meio ...
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Cell Division - St. Pius X High School

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CHAPTER 10

... organisms that reproduce sexually. • Meiosis involves 2 consecutive cell divisions called meiosis I & meiosis II ...
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... • MITOSIS: a process by which the nucleus of a cell divides while maintaining the chromosome number  One cell  two cells  New cells have identical genetic material (DNA) of the parent cell • Four stages of division (Prophase, Metaphase, Anaphase and Telophase - PMAT) plus a period of growth and m ...
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Meiosis



Meiosis /maɪˈoʊsɨs/ is a specialized type of cell division which reduces the chromosome number by half. This process occurs in all sexually reproducing single-celled and multi-celled eukaryotes, including animals, plants, and fungi. Errors in meiosis resulting in aneuploidy are the leading known cause of miscarriage and the most frequent genetic cause of developmental disabilities. In meiosis, DNA replication is followed by two rounds of cell division to produce four daughter cells each with half the number of chromosomes as the original parent cell. The two meiotic divisions are known as meiosis I and meiosis II. Before meiosis begins, during S phase of the cell cycle, the DNA of each chromosome is replicated so that it consists of two identical sister chromatids. In meiosis I, homologous chromosomes pair with each other and can exchange genetic material in a process called chromosomal crossover. The homologous chromosomes are then segregated into two new daughter cells, each containing half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell. At the end of meiosis I, sister chromatids remain attached and may differ from one another if crossing-over occurred. In meiosis II, the two cells produced during meiosis I divide again. Sister chromatids segregate from one another to produce four total daughter cells. These cells can mature into various types of gametes such as ova, sperm, spores, or pollen.Because the number of chromosomes is halved during meiosis, gametes can fuse (i.e. fertilization) to form a zygote with a complete chromosome count containing a combination of paternal and maternal chromosomes. Thus, meiosis and fertilization facilitate sexual reproduction with successive generations maintaining the same number of chromosomes. For example, a typical diploid human cell contains 23 pairs of chromosomes (46 total, half of maternal origin and half of paternal origin). Meiosis produces haploid gametes with one set of 23 chromosomes. When two gametes (an egg and a sperm) fuse, the resulting zygote is once again diploid, with the mother and father each contributing 23 chromosomes. This same pattern, but not the same number of chromosomes, occurs in all organisms that utilize meiosis. Thus, if a species has 30 chromosomes in its somatic cells, it will produce gametes with 15 chromosomes.
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