Module 2 : Section 6 - Sexual Reproduction and Meiosis Flashcards

1
Q

What does meiosis produce

A

Gametes for sexual reproduction

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2
Q

What happens in sexual reproduction

A

In sexual reproduction two gametes join together at fertilisation to form a zygote. The zygote then divides and develops into a new organism

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3
Q

What is meiosis

A
  • A type of cell division that happens in the reproductive organs to produce gametes
  • Meiosis involves a reduction division
  • cells that have the full number of chromosomes to start to with, but the cells that formed from meiosis have half the number
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4
Q

What are haploid cells

A

Cells with half the normal number of chromosomes

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5
Q

Cells formed by meiosis are….

A

Genetically different because each new cell ends up with a different combination of chromosomes

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6
Q

Meiosis involves…

A

Two divisions:
- Meiosis I
- Meiosis II

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7
Q

Which meiosis division is the reduction division

A

Meiosis I is the reduction division (halves the chromosomes number)

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8
Q

What stages are meiosis I and meiosis II broken up into

A

Like mitosis:
- Prophase
- Metaphase
- Anaphase
- Telophase

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9
Q

When does the whole of meiosis begin

A

With interphase. During interphase, the DNA unravels and replicates to produce double-armed chromosomes called sister chromatids

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10
Q

What happens in prophase I in meiosis I

A
  • Chromosomes condense, getting shorter and fatter
  • Chromosomes then arrange themselves into homologous and crossing over occurs
  • centrioles start moving opposite ends of the cells forming spindle fibres
  • nuclear envelope breaks down
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11
Q

What happens in metaphase I in meiosis I

A
  • homologous pairs line up across the centre of the cell and attach to the spindle fibres by the centromere
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12
Q

What happens in anaphase I in meiosis I

A
  • spindles contract separating the homologous pairs - one chromosomes goes to each end of the cell
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13
Q

What happens in telophase I in meiosis I

A
  • A nuclear envelope forms around each group of chromosomes
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14
Q

What happens in cytokinesis in meiosis I

A
  • Cytokinesis (division of the cytoplasm) occurs and two haploid daughter cells are produced
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15
Q

What happens in meiosis II (second division)

A
  • The two daughter cells undergo prophase II, metaphase II, anaphase II, telophase II, which are a lot like the stages in mitosis
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16
Q

What happens in anaphase II in meiosis II

A
  • the pairs of sister chromatids are separated
  • each new daughter cell inherits one chromatid from each chromosome
  • four genetically different haploid cells are produced
  • these are gametes
17
Q

What happens in prophase I to the chromatids

A
  • During prophase I of meiosis I, homologous pairs of chromosomes come together and pair up
  • the chromatids twist around each other and bits of chromatids swap over
  • the chromatids still contain the same genes but now have a different combination of alleles
18
Q

What two main events that happen during meiosis lead to genetic variation

A
  • Crossing over of chromatids
  • independent assortment of chromosomes
19
Q

What does the crossing of chromatids refer to

A

The crossing over of chromatids in meiosis I means that each of the four daughter cells formed from meiosis contains chromatids with different alleles

20
Q

What does independent assortment of chromosomes refer to

A
  • each homologous pair of chromosomes in your cells is made up of one chromosome from your mum and one chromosome from your dad
  • when the homologous pairs line up in metaphase I and are separated in anaphase I, it’s completely random which chromosome from each pair ends up in which daughter cell
  • so the four daughter cells produced by meiosis have completely different combinations of those maternal and paternal chromosomes
  • this is called independent assortment of the chromosomes
  • this ‘shuffling’ of chromosomes leads to genetic variation in any potential offspring