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I. Control of Cell Cycle • Normal growth & development require control of cell cycle (timing, location) • • • A. Some cells divide frequently (Ex: Skin cells) Some cells divide for repair (Ex: Liver cells) Some cells don’t divide (Ex: Nerve cells) Checkpoints • • Control points in cell cycle Three major checkpoints • • • G1 G2 M Fig. 12.15 I. Control of Cell Cycle A. Checkpoints • • “No” at G1 checkpoint directs cell to G0 Most cells in human body in G0 phase Fig. 12.16 II. Sexual Life Cycles • Organisms with sexual life cycles typically contain two copies of each chromosome Two basic cell types • 1) Somatic cells • • • • 2) Gametes • • • • • Diploid (2n) – Two complete sets of chromosomes Chromosome set includes n-1 autosomes & 1 sex chromosome Pairs of autosomes = homologous pairs (same loci) Females – homologous sex chromosomes Haploid (n) Sperm cells, ova Produced by meiosis Unite in fertilization to produce diploid zygote Sexually reproducing organisms alternate between diploid & haploid stages Fig. 13.5 Fig. 13.6 III. Meiosis • Similar to mitosis, except DNA replicated once before cells divide twice • Divisions – Meiosis I, Meiosis II Fig. 13.7 Long, Complex Phase >90% of meiosis (days) Synapsis, Synaptonemal Complex Fig. 13.8 Fig. 13.8 Fig. 13.9 Fig. 13.9 Fig. 13.10 Fig. 13.9 Fig. 13.11 IV. Principles of Inheritance A. Historical Background • • • First person to study inheritance quantitatively was Gregor Mendel (1822-1884) Selective breeding common Known that 1) 2) Hybrid plants with same two parents are similar Mating of hybrid offspring produces diverse progeny (primary hybrids don’t breed true) IV. Principles of Inheritance Mendel’s Experiments B. • Used garden pea (Pisum sativum) 1) 2) 3) Easy to grow Many varieties readily available Flowers could be pollinated in a controlled manner Fig. 14.2 IV. Principles of Inheritance Mendel’s Experiments B. • • • Before experiments, Mendel developed truebreeding lines with consistent phenotypes Used characteristics that could be studied easily Strengths of approach 1) 2) Clearly-defined traits Simple experiments IV. Principles of Inheritance Mendel’s Experiments B. • Prevailing thought: Traits controlled by fluids that blended together in offspring Mendel crossed parent plants (P generation) with different traits • • • Produced offspring resembling only one parent in first generation (F1 generation) Crossed two F1 hybrids • Produced offspring (F2 generation) resembling both grandparents Fig. 14.3 IV. Principles of Inheritance Mendel’s Experiments B. • Prevailing thought: Traits controlled by fluids that blended together in offspring Mendel crossed parent plants (P generation) with different traits • • • Produced offspring resembling only one parent in first generation (F1 generation) Crossed two F1 hybrids • • Produced offspring (F2 generation) resembling both grandparents Results suggested existence of heredity factors (genes) with different forms (alleles) • Dominant trait masked recessive trait in F1 generation Fig. 14.4 IV. Principles of Inheritance Mendel’s Model C. • 1. 2. 3. 4. • Developed hypothesis to explain inheritance patterns Alternative versions of genes account for variations in inherited characters For each character, an organism inherits two alleles, one from each parent If two alleles at a locus differ, dominant allele determines phenotype; recessive allele doesn’t affect phenotype Law of segregation: Alleles separate during gamete formation; one allele in each gamete (mechanism?) Reported findings in 1866; rediscovered in 1900