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... Is this karyotype considered “normal”? ...
LP - Columbia University
LP - Columbia University

... components not lost, just taken apart into subunits. (Lego castle disassembled -- will be reassembled into two smaller castles after division). 3. Spindle -- have set of fibers attached to chromosomes (and to structures at poles). Assembly of spindle is temporary -- fiber components are not new, but ...
Genetics
Genetics

...         Human genome         Human cloning ...
Name: Date: Period: GENETICS WHAT IS A CELL? A is the building
Name: Date: Period: GENETICS WHAT IS A CELL? A is the building

... organelles called CHROMOSOMES. The DNA is wrapped in tight coils, these coils make up the CHROMOSOME. On each of these chromosomes, you have GENES (there could be hundreds of genes on one chromosome). These GENES are what determine your TRAITS (i.e brown hair, blue eyes, height, length of pinkie toe ...
Section 11–4 Meiosis
Section 11–4 Meiosis

... 12. Circle the letter of each sentence that is true about meiosis. a. During meiosis I, homologous chromosomes separate. b. The two daughter cells produced by meiosis I still have the two complete sets of chromosomes as a diploid cell does. c. During anaphase II, the paired chromatids separate. d. A ...
Section 11–4 Meiosis
Section 11–4 Meiosis

... 12. Circle the letter of each sentence that is true about meiosis. a. During meiosis I, homologous chromosomes separate. b. The two daughter cells produced by meiosis I still have the two complete sets of chromosomes as a diploid cell does. c. During anaphase II, the paired chromatids separate. d. A ...
Chromosomes
Chromosomes

...  it can cause some gametes to gain an extra chromosome and others to lose one  Monosomy = A chromosome having no homologue (matching chromosome)  Trisomy =The condition of having three copies of a given chromosome in each somatic (body) cell rather than the normal number of two. ...
Meiosis - Rights4Bacteria
Meiosis - Rights4Bacteria

... 92 chromosomes is FAR too many • The embryo has to have 46 chromosomes . • To get this the egg and sperm must have 23 each. ...
Genetics - Valhalla High School
Genetics - Valhalla High School

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Name - Hightower Trail

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ppt - Department of Plant Sciences
ppt - Department of Plant Sciences

... “drawn” to the poles. This essentially reduces the number of chromosomes that are in each cell by half. Diploid ...
Cell Division - Valhalla High School
Cell Division - Valhalla High School

... • G1: First phase of interphase in which a cell does most of its growing. They increase in size and synthesize new proteins and organelles. • S: The second phase of interphase. Chromosomes are replicated and the synthesis of DNA molecules takes place. • G2: Third phase of interphase. The cell prepar ...
complex_patterns_of_inheritance_h._bio
complex_patterns_of_inheritance_h._bio

... Early in embryonic development in females, one of the two X chromosomes is randomly and permanently inactivated in cells other than egg cells. ...
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Genetics Post Test - Gulf Coast State College

... a. Homologous chromosomes have the same length. b. Homologous chromosomes have the same centromere position. c. Homologous chromosomes have the exact same type of allele at the same location. d. Homologous chromosomes pair up during meiosis I. ...
chromosome disorders.
chromosome disorders.

... of the short arms • The resulting balanced karyotype has only 45 chromosomes, including the translocation chromosome, which in effect is made up of the long arms of two chromosomes. • Although Robertsonian translocations involving all combinations of the acrocentric chromosomes have been detected, t ...
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Review Relay 1 Cell Reproduction 1. How is mitosis and cell

... Review Relay 3 Protein Synthesis 1. _________________________ process of making mRNA _________________________ process of copying DNA _________________________ process of assembling amino acids at the ribosome _________________________ place to find DNA in the cell _________________________ place o ...
Genetic Control of Cell Function and Inheritance
Genetic Control of Cell Function and Inheritance

click here
click here

... Quiz 3 ...
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... Eukaryotic: a domain of organisms having cells each with a distinct nucleus within which the genetic material is contained along with other membrane-bound organelles. Example: Characteristic 1: Prokaryotic: any organism having cells in each of which the genetic material is in a single DNA chain, not ...
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... 1. ____Binary fission is a type sexual reproduction that prokaryotes undergo. 2. ____ Adult stem cells found in the hippocampus are able to differentiate into many other types of cells therefore they are totipotent. 3. ____ You will see tetrads (homologous pairs) line up at the metaphase plate durin ...
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C2005/F2401 `07 -- Lecture 19 -- Last Edited

... 1. Chromosomes. DNA (+ associated proteins) visible in microscope as individual structures called chromosomes. DNA tightly coiled, easy to distribute but not accessible to enzymes of replic. and transc. (condensed > 10,000 X). Individual balls of string (in this state) vs unwound, tangled mess (betw ...
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Phase in which the cell has a nuclear “Log

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2-HumanGen SexLinked
2-HumanGen SexLinked

... Morgan observed the Drosophila’s four pairs of homologous chromosomes – one pair was different in males and females. – In females the chromosomes were identical. – In males the chromosomes were different. One chromosomes looked like those of the female but the other was shorter and hook-shaped. ...
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Chromosome



A chromosome (chromo- + -some) is a packaged and organized structure containing most of the DNA of a living organism. It is not usually found on its own, but rather is complexed with many structural proteins called histones as well as associated transcription (copying of genetic sequences) factors and several other macromolecules. Two ""sister"" chromatids (half a chromosome) join together at a protein junction called a centromere. Chromosomes are normally visible under a light microscope only when the cell is undergoing mitosis. Even then, the full chromosome containing both joined sister chromatids becomes visible only during a sequence of mitosis known as metaphase (when chromosomes align together, attached to the mitotic spindle and prepare to divide). This DNA and its associated proteins and macromolecules is collectively known as chromatin, which is further packaged along with its associated molecules into a discrete structure called a nucleosome. Chromatin is present in most cells, with a few exceptions - erythrocytes for example. Occurring only in the nucleus of eukaryotic cells, chromatin composes the vast majority of all DNA, except for a small amount inherited maternally which is found in mitochondria. In prokaryotic cells, chromatin occurs free-floating in cytoplasm, as these cells lack organelles and a defined nucleus. The main information-carrying macromolecule is a single piece of coiled double-stranded DNA, containing many genes, regulatory elements and other noncoding DNA. The DNA-bound macromolecules are proteins, which serve to package the DNA and control its functions. Chromosomes vary widely between different organisms. Some species such as certain bacteria also contain plasmids or other extrachromosomal DNA. These are circular structures in the cytoplasm which contain cellular DNA and play a role in horizontal gene transfer.Compaction of the duplicated chromosomes during cell division (mitosis or meiosis) results either in a four-arm structure (pictured to the right) if the centromere is located in the middle of the chromosome or a two-arm structure if the centromere is located near one of the ends. Chromosomal recombination during meiosis and subsequent sexual reproduction plays a vital role in genetic diversity. If these structures are manipulated incorrectly, through processes known as chromosomal instability and translocation, the cell may undergo mitotic catastrophe and die, or it may unexpectedly evade apoptosis leading to the progression of cancer.In prokaryotes (see nucleoids) and viruses, the DNA is often densely packed and organized. In the case of archaea by homologs to eukaryotic histones, in the case of bacteria by histone-like proteins. Small circular genomes called plasmids are often found in bacteria and also in mitochondria and chloroplasts, reflecting their bacterial origins.
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