9.2: Meiosis and genetic variation Flashcards

1
Q

What does Mitosis produce

A

Produces TWO daughter cells with the SAME number of chromosomes as the parent cell and eachother

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2
Q

What does Meiosis produce

A

Produces FOUR daughter cells with HALF the number of chromosomes as the parent cell

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3
Q

Where does mitosis occur

A

All cells but sex cells, and red blood cells

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4
Q

Why is meiosis necessary

A

In sexual reproduction, two gametes fuse together to form new offspring.

To maintain a constant number of chromosomes in the adult of species, it is important that the number of chromosomes is halved at some point

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5
Q

When does halving of the chromosome number take place

A

During Meosis

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6
Q

Where does meiosis occur

A

Testes and Ovum - Sperm and egg cell

Some plants this occurs during spore production

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7
Q

What do diploid cells contain

A

Two complete sets of chromosomes, one from each parent

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8
Q

What stages are involved in meiosis

A

Meiosis 1:

Homologous chromosomes pair up and their chromatids wrap around one another

Equivalent portions of each chromatid may cross over

Meoisis 2:

The chromatids move apart, 4 cells are formed

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9
Q

What is the process of Meiosis 1

A
  1. Homologous chromosomes pair up and their chromatids wrap around eachother - Equivalent portions of each chromatid may be exchanged during this process
  2. By the end of this process, the homologous pairs have separated with one chromosome from each pair entering one of the two daughter cells
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10
Q

Products of Meiosis 1

A

2 daughter cells

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11
Q

What is the process of meiosis 2

A
  1. Chromatids move apart

2. Four daughter cells are formed - each containing 23 chromosomes

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12
Q

How does meiosis led to genetic variation occuring (3 ways)

A
  1. Independent segregation of homologous chromosomes
  2. Crossing over
  3. Variety of new genetic combinations
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13
Q

What is a gene

A

A section of DNA that codes for a polypeptide

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14
Q

What is a locus

A

The position of a gene on a chromosome or DNA molecule

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15
Q

Allele

A

Variation of a gene

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16
Q

Homologous chromosome

A

A pair of chromosomes, one maternal, one paternal, that have the same gene loci

17
Q

Variation by independent segregation of homologous chromosomes

A
  1. During meiosis 1, each chromosome lines up alongside its homologous partner
  2. When they line themselves up, it is done at random. One of each pair will pass into each of the daughter cells. Which one of the pair goes into the daughter cell depends on how many pairs are lined up in a parent cell
  3. The lining up of pairs is random, therefore the combination of chromosomes of maternal and paternal origin that go into the daughter cell is a matter of chance
18
Q

Variety of new Genetic combinations

A

Each member of a homoloogus pair has exactly the same genes. However, the alleles of these genes differ

The independent assortment of these chromosomes therefore produces new combinations

19
Q

Genetic combination by crossing over

A

During meiosis 1, each chromosome lines up.

  1. The chromatids of each pair become twisted around each other
  2. During this twisting process, tensions are created and portions of the chromatids break off
  3. The equivalent portions of homologous chromosomes are exchanged
  4. In this way, new combinations are formed
20
Q

How to calculate the number of possible combinations for each daughter cell

A

2^n, n = Number of homologous pairs

21
Q

How to calculate the possible combinations when two different parents come together

A

(2^n)^2, n = Number of homologous pairs