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Ch. 13 Meiosis I. Introduction A. Chromosomes and their arrangement 1. In humans, Somatic cells (norm body) have 46 chromosomes Chromosomes differ in Size Centromere position Stained banding patterns I. Introduction A. Chromosomes and their arrangement 2. Homologous Pairs Each chromosome has a partner similar in appearance. Carry genes for the same traits Called Homologous pair Somatic cells have 23 pairs I. Introduction A. Chromosomes and their arrangement 3. A Karyotype arranges chromosomes in homologous pairs I. Introduction A. Chromosomes and their arrangement 4. The sex chromosome pair One pair determines gender XX = female XY = male The other 22 pairs are called Autosomes I. Introduction A. Chromosomes and their arrangement 5. Chromosome arrangement in sexual reproduction One chromosome from each pair is inherited from each parent. In each of your homologous pairs one chrom. Is maternal the other is paternal You have a set of 23 from each I. Introduction A. Chromosomes and their arrangement 5. Chromosome arrangement in sexual reproduction Gametes (sex cells) have 23, one out of each homologous pair. 22 autosomes, and a X or Y 23 = Haploid (n) I. Introduction A. Chromosomes and their arrangement 5. Chromosome arrangement in sexual reproduction The Zygote (fertilized egg) gets two haploid sets a maternal set from egg a paternal set from sperm It is now Diploid (2n) = 46 I. Introduction B. The Role of Mitosis To replicate diploid somatic cells from other diploid somatic cells I. Introduction C. The Role of Meiosis To make Gametes, haploid (n) cells from diploid cells Chromosome number is halved to make sperm and egg II. Meiosis and Life Cycles A.Meiosis and fertilization alternate Meiosis halves the genome Fertilization doubles the genome B. In humans, gametes are the only haploid stage II. Meiosis and Life Cycles C. In other organisms, the haploid stage is more prominent 1. Most fungi and some protists Zygote (2n) Meiosis Multicellular adult (n) Mitosis Gametes (n) Fertilization - Zygote II. Meiosis and Life Cycles 2. Plants - Alternation of Generations Sporophyte (2n) Meiosis Spores (n) Mitosis Gametophyte (n) Mitosis Gametes (n) Fertilization Zygote (2n) ….. Sporophyte (2n) III. The Process of Meiosis A. Chromosomes replicate first as in mitosis Each chromo and its copy = Sister Chromatids B. Followed by TWO Divisions Meiosis I Meiosis II C. Results in 4 daughter cells (n) D. Cuts chromosome number in half Replicates once, but divides twice. III. The Process of Meiosis E. Meiosis I - Separates homologous pairs 1. Prophase I - Homologous chromosomes pair up - forms tetrads III. The Process of Meiosis E. Meiosis I - Separates homologous pairs 1. Prophase I - Within tetrads, Crossing Over may take place Chromosomes cross and trade sections Spindle forms as usual III. The Process of Meiosis E. Meiosis I - Separates homologous pairs 2. Metaphase I - Tetrads center in spindle as usual III. The Process of Meiosis E. Meiosis I - Separates homologous pairs 3. Anaphase I - Homologous pairs are separated Sister chromatids remain attached III. The Process of Meiosis E. Meiosis I - Separates homologous pairs 4. Telophase I and Cytokinesis as in normal mitosis III. The Process of Meiosis F. Meiosis II - Similar to Mitosis 1. Prophase II - normal spindle action 2. Metaphse II Sister chromatids line up on the metaphase plate 3. Anaphase II - sister chromatids are separated 4. Telophase and Cytokinesis - normal III. The Process of Meiosis G. Meiosis ends with 4 haploid daughter cells H. Key differences between Mitosis and Meiosis 1. Resultant chromosome number 2. Meiosis cells are not clones Mitosis cells are 3. Number of divisions III. The Process of Meiosis H. Key differences between Mitosis and Meiosis events are unique to Meiosis I 4. In Prophase I, Homologs held together by Synapsis Protein zipper - synaptonemal complex 5. Chromosomes together as Tetrad 6. Crossing over - sections exchanges at junctions called Chiasmata III. The Process of Meiosis H. Key differences between Mitosis and Meiosis 7. Separations differ 8. Meiosis makes 4 daughter cells. IV. Origins of Genetic Variation A. The Production of Genetic variation 1. Three mechanisms (Outline) Independent Assortment Crossing Over Random Fertilization IV. Origins of Genetic Variation 2. Independent Assortment The random orientation of tetrads along the metaphase plate. Each one orients randomly, independent of how the other tetrads arrange. From each homologous pair, a gamete could get the paternal one or maternal one Given 23 pairs, there are many possible combinations of maternal and paternals IV. Origins of Genetic Variation 3. Crossing Over - produces Recombinant chromosomes Crossing over breaks linked genes (genes on the same chromosome) This creates new combinations of traits IV. Origins of Genetic Variation 4. Random Fertilization - Any sperm can fertilize any egg. Each sperm and egg is unique Each one has unique combinations of paternal and maternal chromosomes. Each one has unique recombinations due to crossing over. A zygote can result from any sperm with any egg IV. Origins of Genetic Variation B. Importance of Genetic Variation The raw material for evolution. Genetic variation provides the range of traits for natural selection. Less genetic variability = lower ability to adapt and change