Meiosis and mutations Flashcards

1
Q

What does diploid mean?

A

cells where the nucleus has two sets of chromosomes

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2
Q

What does haploid mean?

A

cells that only have one copy of each chromosome

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3
Q

What is a homologous pair?

A

a pair of chromosomes, one maternal and one paternal, that have the same gene loci and determine the same features

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4
Q

What is meiosis?

A

the type of cell division where the number of chromosomes is halved- results in 4 non- genetically identical daughter cells

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5
Q

What is a chromatid?

A

one of the arms of a chromosome

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6
Q

What is a centromere?

A

joins the chromatids together to make a chromosome

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7
Q

What is independent segregation?

A

randomly shuffled homologous pairs- each chromosome is inherited randomly, and independent of each other- inheritance of one does not impact inheritance of another

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8
Q

What is recombination/crossing over?

A

happens when the chromatids of a bivalent get twisted, and breaks occur, meaning parts of the chromatids are exchanged between homologous pairs. it happens at random and is very rare/infrequent

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9
Q

What is a mutation?

A

a change in the amount or structure of DNA

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10
Q

What is acquired mutation?

A

occurs in cells after conception

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11
Q

What is hereditary mutation?

A

a gene change in a gamete that becomes incorporated into the DNA in every cell of the body of the offspring

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12
Q

What are the two types of mutation?

A

a gene mutation- a change in the base sequence of the gene, which can cause a change in the polypeptide chain. it is caused by errors during DNA replication

a chromosome mutation- a change in the number or structure of the chromosomes. it is caused by errors during cell division

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13
Q

What is substitution?

A

when one of the bases is swapped for a different base- DOES NOT RESULT IN FRAME SHIFT- but could change the amino acid it codes for

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14
Q

What is deletion?

A

the removal/deletion of a base in a sequence, causing a frame shift to the left

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15
Q

What is addition?

A

the addition of a base in a sequence, causing frame shift to the right

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16
Q

What is frame shift?

A

when, due to the addition or deletion of a base, the subsequent triplet codes are all altered, due to it being read in 3s

17
Q

What is a mutagenic agent?

A

a chemical, biological, or physical agent that causes changes to the DNA of a cell

18
Q

Name 4 mutagenic agents

A

-x-rays
-gamma rays
-benzene derivatives
-mustard gas

19
Q

What are the stages of meiosis?

A

prophase I
metaphase I
anaphase I
telophase I

prophase II
metaphase II
anaphase II
telophase II

20
Q

What happens in interphase?

A

DNA is replicated, the cell grows, and organelles are synthesised

21
Q

What causes variation in a species?

A

crossing over
independent segregation

22
Q

What is the chiasma?

A

the point of crossing over

23
Q

When does crossing over happen?

A

only in prophase I

24
Q

How does independent segregation happen?

A

homologous pairs attach to spindle fibres opposite each other in a random order, and the maternal and paternal chromosomes are not always on opposite sides. it only happens during metaphase I.

25
Q

How does independent segregation lead to variation?

A

the daughter cells will contain different, random assortments of the randomly separated chromosomes, so the gametes aren’t genetically identical

26
Q

How do you calculate how many variations there could be in meiosis due to independent segregation?

A

2^n –> where n equals the number of pairs

example- 2 pairs - 2 ^2 = 4 variations

27
Q

What is the point of meiosis I?

A

to separate the homologous pairs

28
Q

What is the point of meiosis II?

A

to separate the chromatids of the chromosomes

29
Q

What happens in prophase I?

A

chromosomes condense and shorten, and homologous chromosomes pair to form a bivalent
CROSSING OVER CAN HAPPEN HERE

30
Q

Compare meiosis to mitosis

A

meiosis-
-2 cell divisions
-4 daughter cells produced
-not genetically identical daughter cells
-gametes created
-crossing over can occur

mitosis-
-1 cell division
-2 daughter cells produced
-genetically identical daughter cells
-sematic cells created
-crossing over cannot occur

31
Q

When presented with a life cycle question, what is happening when it goes from 2n –> n?

A

meiosis, it is going from diploid to haploid

32
Q

When presented with a life cycle question, what is happening when it goes from n–> 2n?

A

fertilization, it is going from haploid to diploid

33
Q

How do you calculate the number of possible chromosome combinations produced from the fertilization of two gametes?

A

(2n)^2

where n equals the haploid number/ how many pairs there are

you must square it as you are joining gametes together

34
Q

What is non-disjunction?

A

when chromosomes fail to separate correctly during meiosis

35
Q

What is it called when you have extra whole sets of chromosomes?

A

polyploidy

36
Q

What happens when an organism has odd numbers of chromosomes?

A

the organism tends to be infertile as you cannot evenly half the them to form gametes

37
Q

When can’t you form gametes?

A

if you can’t form homologous pairs

38
Q

When could non-disjunction happen?

A

in meiosis I during the splitting of the homologous pairs

or

in meiosis II during the splitting of the chromosomes into chromatids

39
Q

What increases the chance of non-disjunction?

A

older age