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Chapter 9 Sexual Reproduction Genetically Unique A single couple can potentially create over 70 trillion different zygotes! All possible egg chromosome combinations X possible sperm chromosome combinations How do you get so many combinations? Meiosis Results in 4 genetically unique gametes Females = eggs (oogenesis) ◦ Starts before birth ◦ Ends around age 50 Males = sperm (spermatogenesis) ◦ Does not begin until puberty ◦ Continues through rest of life The Basics 2 major functions ◦ Reduces chromosome number ½ from each parent ◦ Shuffles the chromosome “deck” Which chromosomes combine to form each unique ½ set Fertilization ◦ Fusion of 1 egg and 1 sperm ◦ Restores chromosome number ◦ Provides further shuffling Homologous Chromosomes How do you decide which ½ of 46 chromosomes gets separated? Mom’s ½ and Dad’s ½ have to match Chromosomes come in pairs = homologous chromosomes The ½ set found in each gamete = ½ of each pair The Pairs Most pairs = autosomes (regular chromosomes) The XX or XY pair = sex chromosomes If a cell has a complete set with pairs matched up = diploid number (2n) Gamete with ½ of each pair = haploid number (n) What do the pairs have in common? Size Shape Centromere location Banding pattern when stained Same genes in same order ◦ Genes are same (ex. Eye color) ◦ Version of the gene can vary (blue, brown) Versions of a gene = alleles What’s a Life Cycle? All of the reproductive events from one generation to the next Involves mitosis (growth and development) Involves meiosis (oogenesis or spermatogenesis) ◦ Cutting the chromosome # in half makes it so that 2 parents can produce an offspring that is genetically unique, but still maintains the overall chromosome # for that species Overview of Meiosis A lot like mitosis, but the whole process happens twice Still starts with DNA replication ◦ So, the cell has to divide 2x in order to cut the chromosome # in half One main difference: synapsis ◦ Meiosis I: homologous chromosomes “find” eachother ◦ Form a tetrad ◦ Swap genes & further increase diversity Crossing Over Happens during synapsis Creates new combinations of genes that have never existed before The chromosomes in you from your mom and dad get mixed up together So, the chromosome you pass on to your kid will be a blend of their grandparents’ chromosomes Meiosis I Tetrads form Crossing over occurs Homologous chromosomes separate Ends with 2 haploid cells (n) BUT… Sister chromatids still joined at the centromere Copies still need to be separated Meiosis II A lot like mitosis Duplicated chromosomes line up individually along equator Centromeres break Copies are separated Ends with 4 haploid cells (n) Caveats Meiosis makes 4 gametes ◦ 4 equal sperm cells ◦ 1 egg cell and 3 polar bodies Meiosis only happens at special times and in special tissues ◦ Puberty Males vs. females ◦ Ovaries and testes Abnormal Chromosome Inheritance When tetrads get stuck together— nondisjunction Egg or sperm can end up with an extra chromosome or a missing chromosome Down Syndrome (trisomy 21) Turner Syndrome (monosomy of X chromosome) Klinefelter Syndrome (trisomy XXY) Red Algae