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6.1 Chromosomes and Meiosis KEY CONCEPT Gametes have half the number of chromosomes that body cells have. 13.1 Ecologists Study Relationships The fusion of two gametes results in offspring that are a genetic mixture of both parents. • Fertilization occurs when a sperm and an egg combine. •The new “combined” cell must contain the same number of chromosomes as the parents. • Sperm and egg cells need only half the usual number of chromosomes. 6.1 Chromosomes and Meiosis You have body cells and gametes. • Body cells are also called somatic cells. • Germ cells develop into gametes. – Germ cells are located in the ovaries and testes. Gametes are sex cells: egg and sperm. Gametes have DNA that can be passed to offspring. body cells sex cells (sperm) sex cells (egg) 6.1 Chromosomes and Meiosis Your cells have autosomes and sex chromosomes. • Your body (somatic) cells have 23 pairs of chromosomes. – Homologous pairs of chromosomes have the same structure. – For each homologous pair, one chromosome comes from each parent. – Chromosome pairs numbers 1 – 22 are autosomes (determine non sex-related characteristics). – Chromosome pair 23 are sex chromosomes (X and Y determine gender in mammals.) 6.1 Chromosomes and Meiosis Body cells are diploid ; gametes are haploid Diploid (2n) cells have two copies of every chromosome. • Body cells are diploid. • Half the chromosomes come from each parent. – This example shows a diploid cell with two homologous pairs of chromosomes. 6.1 Chromosomes and Meiosis • How many pairs of chromosomes do human body cells have? 23 • How many individual chromosomes do human body cells have? 46 • Which chromosomes in the previous diagram are pairs? How can you tell? Purlpe & green; red and teal – can tell by length • Are the two chromosomes in a homologous pair identical? Not identical but they match 6.1 Chromosomes and Meiosis • Haploid (n) cells have one copy of every chromosome. – Gametes are haploid. – This example shows a haploid cell with two individual chromosomes. 6.1 Chromosomes and Meiosis • How many pairs of chromosomes do human gamete cells have? None – no pairs in a gamete • How many individual chromosomes do human gamete cells have? 23 6.1 Chromosomes and Meiosis • Chromosome number must be maintained in animals. • Mitosis and meiosis are types of nuclear division that make different types of cells. • Mitosis makes two identical daughter cells. 6.1 Chromosomes and Meiosis • The top cell in the previous diagram is in what phase of Mitosis? prophase • How many chromosomes are contained in the original “mother” cell? 4 • Which cell did the original “mother” look like? Like the daughter cells 6.1 Chromosomes and Meiosis • Meiosis makes haploid cells from diploid cells. – Meiosis occurs in sex cells. – Meiosis produces gametes. 6.1 Chromosomes and Meiosis • What did the original “mother” cell (for the previous diagram) look like? Like the mother cell in mitosis (4 chrom – 2 long and 2 short) • Which row in the previous diagram shows haploid cells? Bottom row 6.1 Chromosomes and Meiosis Mitosis / Meiosis Comparison 6.1 Chromosomes and Meiosis • How is the division of chromosomes different between Mitosis and Meiosis? Mitosis – 1 division – makes 2 cells – same # chrom as mother Mitosis – 2 divisions – makes 4 cells – half # chrom as mother • What is the difference in function between Mitosis and Meiosis? Mitosis – body cells Mitosis – reproductive cells • Are each of the four cells in the last row of the previous diagram unique? No – two pairs of “twins” 6.1 Chromosomes and Meiosis •Every sperm and every egg cell produced is genetically unique. •The genes contained in one egg cell are different than any other egg cell produced by that organism. •The genes contained in one sperm cell are different than any other sperm cell produced by that organism •How is that possible?? 6.1 Chromosomes and Meiosis Meiosis and Crossing Over • How does the simulation show that each cell is unique? – Color of each strand is different • What is this process called? – Crossing over • How would this process compare with 23 sets of chromosomes vs. 1 set? – With 23 pairs there are billions and billions of possible combinations http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/9834092339/student_view0/chapter11/meiosis_with_crossing_over.html 6.1 Chromosomes and Meiosis Meiosis and Crossing Over