Heredity, Gene Regulation, and Development I. Mendel's Contributions II. Meiosis and the Chromosomal Theory A.Overview - types of organismal reproduction.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Meiosis And Sexual Life Cycle
Advertisements

Meiosis and Sexual Life Cycles
Round and Yellow Peas Wrinkled and Green Peas C. Mendel’s Experiments 1. Monohybrid Experiments 2. Monohybrid Test Cross 3. Dihybrid Experiments a. Parental.
Meiosis and Sexual Reproduction
Sexual reproduction How many chromosomes do we have in body cells?
Chapter 13 RQ What are hereditary units of information called?
Chapter 12 Meiosis and Sexual Reproduction. Question? u Does Like really beget Like? u The offspring will “resemble” the parents, but they may not be.
Chapter 10 Mendel and Meiosis.
Meiosis and genetic variation
Meiosis and Sexual Life Cycles
Meiosis.
Topic 4 Genes, Chromosomes
Chapter 13 Meiosis and Sexual Life Cycles
1 Meiosis and genetic variation IB Biology HL E. McIntyre.
Chapter 13: Meiosis & Sexual Life Cycles
Meiosis Ch. 9.
Chapter 11: MEIOSIS The Cellular Basis of Sexual Reproduction AP Biology RussellAP Biology Russell B. RhodesB. Rhodes.
Sexual Life Cycles: Meiosis
Meiosis and Sexual Life Cycles. Question? u Does Like really beget Like? u The offspring will “resemble” the parents, but they may not be “exactly” like.
Chapter Meiosis and Genetic Variation
M. Saadatian MEIOSIS AND SEXUAL LIFE CYCLES 1.
Meiosis and Sexual Reproduction
Chapter 13 Meiosis. Living Things Reproduce Results in similarities and differences between offspring and parents Facilitated by heredity or inheritance.
Ch 13 NOTES – Meiosis For a species to survive, it must REPRODUCE! Genetics Terminology: AutosomesSex chromosomes Somatic cellDiploid GameteHaploid KaryotypeZygote.
Chapter 13:Meiosis. Heredity 4 Heredity: the transmission of traits from one generation to the next 4 Asexual reproduction: clones 4 Sexual reproduction:
Meiosis and Sexual Life Cycle Chapter 13. Heredity (inheritance) - transmission of traits from 1 generation to next. Variation - siblings differ from.
II. Meiosis and the Chromosomal Theory A.Overview B.Costs and Benefits of Asexual and Sexual Reproduction C.Mixing Genomes D.Meiosis 1. Overview 2n 1n.
Warm up 1. Compare sexual to asexual reproduction. 2. What are homologous chromosomes? 1. Describe what major processes occur during a sexual life cycle.
Chapter 13 Meiosis and Sexual Life Cycles. Question? u Does Like really beget Like? u The offspring will “resemble” the parents, but they may not be “exactly”
Meiosis & Sexual Reproduction Cell division/Asexual reproduction Mitosis ▫produce cells with same information  identical daughter cells ▫exact.
A Darwinian View of Life I. Darwin’s Contributions II. Mendel's Contributions III. The Cellular Context.
Meiosis KM 1 Meiosis and genetic variation pp
Chapter 13: Meiosis & Sexual Life Cycles. What you must know The difference between asexual and sexual reproduction. The role of meiosis and fertilization.
Meiosis and Sexual Life Cycles. Sexual Reproduction Reproduction = process by which a new generation of cells or multicellular individuals is produced.
Sexual Reproduction and Genetics Section 1: Meiosis Section 2: Mendelian Genetics Section 3: Gene Linkage and Polyploidy Chapter 10 Sexual Reproduction.
Click on a lesson name to select. Section 1: Meiosis Section 2: Mendelian Genetics Section 3: Gene Linkage and Polyploidy Sexual Reproduction and Genetics.
A study in creating sex cells Meiosis KM1 Genome Genome: Complete complement of an organism’s DNA. Includes genes (control traits) and non-coding DNA.
Meiosis and Sexual Life Cycles. Life is distinguished by the ability of organisms to reproduce their own kind. Genetics: the scientific study of heredity.
Bellringer Why is genetic diversity beneficial to populations? How does sexual reproduction increase genetic diversity? How does meiosis increase genetic.
MEIOSIS AND SEXUAL LIFE CYCLES CH 13. I. Overview of Reproduction Asexual reproduction: produces identical offspring (budding, cloning, binary fission/mitosis)
Click on a lesson name to select. Section 1: Meiosis Section 2: Mendelian Genetics Section 3: Gene Linkage and Polyploidy Sexual Reproduction and Genetics.
Chapter 13 Meiosis and Sexual Life Cycles. Question? Reproduction is a characteristic of Life Does Like really beget Like? This chapter deals with reproduction.
CHAPTER 13 SEXUAL LIFE CYCLES: MEIOSIS OFFSPRING ACQUIRE GENES FROM PARENTS BY INHERITING CHROMOSOMES.
E. The Power of Independent Assortment 1. If you can assume that the genes assort independently, then you can calculate ‘single gene’ outcomes and multiply.
Click on a lesson name to select. Section 1: Meiosis Section 2: Mendelian Genetics Section 3: Gene Linkage and Polyploidy Chapter 10 Sexual Reproduction.
Chapter 10.  The instructions for all your traits are located on your DNA on small segments called genes. Genes are located on chromosomes Every species.
Chapter 10 Mendel and Meiosis Objectives: Analyze the the results obtained by Gregor Mendel in his experiments with garden peas. Predict the possible offspring.
Problem of the day: Cancer is many diseases that all have the same root problem. Chemotherapy is aimed at this problem. What exactly does chemotherapy.
Chapter 10 Meiosis and Sexual Reproduction. Chromosome Numbers: 1.All sexually reproducing organisms have pairs of chromosomes. 2.Homologous Chromosomes:
Inheritance and Sexual Life Cycles
Ch. 13 MEIOSIS AND SEXUAL LIFE CYCLES
Meiosis & Sexual Life Cycles
Chapter 10: Sexual Reproduction and Genetics
Reproduction, Heredity, and Variation
Sperm & Eggs & Variation!
Sexual Reproduction and Genetics
Meiosis & Sexual Reproduction
Meiosis & Sexual Life Cycles
MEIOSIS AND SEXUAL LIFE CYCLES OVERVIEW
Meiosis and Sexual Life Cycles
Heredity, Gene Regulation, and Development
Hereditary Similarity and Variation
Meiosis and Sexual Life Cycles
Meiosis and genetic variation
Meiosis and Sexual Life Cycles
Meiosis.
Heredity, Gene Regulation, and Development
For a species to survive, it must REPRODUCE!
Meiosis and genetic variation
Meiosis and Sexual Life Cycles
Presentation transcript:

Heredity, Gene Regulation, and Development I. Mendel's Contributions II. Meiosis and the Chromosomal Theory A.Overview - types of organismal reproduction – asexual reproduction (typically by mitosis)

Heredity, Gene Regulation, and Development I. Mendel's Contributions II. Meiosis and the Chromosomal Theory A.Overview - types of organismal reproduction – sexual reproduction - conjugation in bacteria and some protists – gene exchange.

Heredity, Gene Regulation, and Development I. Mendel's Contributions II. Meiosis and the Chromosomal Theory A.Overview - types of organismal reproduction – sexual reproduction - fusion of specialized cells - gametes isogamyanisogamy oogamy Males and females Usually just two types, but sometimes a range (Chlamydamonas) Multiple mating types (‘sexes’)

Heredity, Gene Regulation, and Development I. Mendel's Contributions II. Meiosis and the Chromosomal Theory A.Overview - types of organismal reproduction – sexual reproduction - who produces these specialized reproductive cells? Hermaphrodism

Heredity, Gene Regulation, and Development I. Mendel's Contributions II. Meiosis and the Chromosomal Theory A.Overview - types of organismal reproduction – sexual reproduction - who produces these specialized reproductive cells? Monoecious plants Male and female flowers on the same individual plant

Heredity, Gene Regulation, and Development I. Mendel's Contributions II. Meiosis and the Chromosomal Theory A.Overview - types of organismal reproduction – sexual reproduction - who produces these specialized reproductive cells? Dioecious organisms: either male or female Photoby icmoore: Sex changes: Sequential hermaphrodism Protandry: male then female Sexes permanent Progyny: female then male

Heredity, Gene Regulation, and Development I. Mendel's Contributions II. Meiosis and the Chromosomal Theory A.Overview B.Costs and Benefits of Asexual and Sexual Reproduction Asexual (copying existing genotype)Sexual (making new genotype) Benefits 1)No mate need 2)All genes transferred to every offspring 3)Offspring survival high in same environment

Heredity, Gene Regulation, and Development I. Mendel's Contributions II. Meiosis and the Chromosomal Theory A.Overview B.Costs and Benefits of Asexual and Sexual Reproduction Asexual (copying existing genotype)Sexual (making new genotype) Benefits 1)No mate need 2)All genes transferred to every offspring 3)Offspring survival high in same environment Costs 1)“Muller’s ratchet” 2)Mutation (rare) only source of variation 3)Offspring survival is “all or none” in a changing environment

Heredity, Gene Regulation, and Development I. Mendel's Contributions II. Meiosis and the Chromosomal Theory A.Overview B.Costs and Benefits of Asexual and Sexual Reproduction Asexual (copying existing genotype)Sexual (making new genotype) Benefits 1)No mate need 2)All genes transferred to every offspring 3)Offspring survival high in same environment Costs 1)May need to find/acquire a mate 2)Only ½ genes to each offspring 3)Offspring variable – many combo’s bad Costs 1)“Muller’s ratchet” 2)Mutation (rare) only source of variation 3)Offspring survival is “all or none” in a changing environment

Heredity, Gene Regulation, and Development I. Mendel's Contributions II. Meiosis and the Chromosomal Theory A.Overview B.Costs and Benefits of Asexual and Sexual Reproduction Asexual (copying existing genotype)Sexual (making new genotype) Benefits 1)No mate need 2)All genes transferred to every offspring 3)Offspring survival high in same environment Costs 1)May need to find/acquire a mate 2)Only ½ genes to each offspring 3)Offspring variable – many combo’s bad Costs 1)“Muller’s ratchet” 2)Mutation (rare) only source of variation 3)Offspring survival is “all or none” in a changing environment Benefits 1)Not all genes inherited – no ratchet 2)MUCH more variation produced 3)In a changing environment, producing variable offspring is very adaptive

Heredity, Gene Regulation, and Development I. Mendel's Contributions II. Meiosis and the Chromosomal Theory A.Overview B.Costs and Benefits of Asexual and Sexual Reproduction Asexual (copying existing genotype)Sexual (making new genotype) Benefits 1)No mate need 2)All genes transferred to every offspring 3)Offspring survival high in same environment Costs 1)May need to find/acquire a mate 2)Only ½ genes to each offspring 3)Offspring variable – many combo’s bad Costs 1)“Muller’s ratchet” 2)Mutation (rare) only source of variation 3)Offspring survival is “all or none” in a changing environment Benefits 1)Not all genes inherited – no ratchet 2)MUCH more variation produced 3)In a changing environment, producing variable offspring is very adaptive And because all environments on earth change, sex has been adaptive for all organisms. Even those that reproduce primarily by asexual means will reproduce sexually when the environment changes. This is an adaptive strategy – it produces lots of variation.

Heredity, Gene Regulation, and Development I. Mendel's Contributions II. Meiosis and the Chromosomal Theory A.Overview B.Costs and Benefits of Asexual and Sexual Reproduction C.Mixing Genomes 1. HOW? - problem: fusing body cells doubles genetic information over generations 2n 4n 8n

Heredity, Gene Regulation, and Development I. Mendel's Contributions II. Meiosis and the Chromosomal Theory A.Overview B.Costs and Benefits of Asexual and Sexual Reproduction C.Mixing Genomes 1. HOW? - problem: fusing body cells doubles genetic information over generations - solution: alternate fusion of cells with the reduction of genetic information 2n Reduction (meiosis) 1n Fusion (fertilization)

B.Mixing Genomes 1. HOW? 2. WHEN? Zygotic meiosis: Fungi, some protists

B.Mixing Genomes 1. HOW? 2. WHEN? Gametic meiosis: Animals

B.Mixing Genomes 1. HOW? 2. WHEN? Sporic meiosis: Plants, some fungi

II. Meiosis and the Chromosomal Theory A.Overview B.Costs and Benefits of Asexual and Sexual Reproduction C.Mixing Genomes D.Meiosis 1. Overview 2n 1n REDUCTIONDIVISION

II. Meiosis and the Chromosomal Theory A.Overview B.Costs and Benefits of Asexual and Sexual Reproduction C.Mixing Genomes D.Meiosis 1. Overview 2. Meiosis I (Reduction) There are four replicated chromosomes in the initial cell. Each chromosomes pairs with its homolog (that influences the same suite of traits), and pairs align on the metaphase plate. Pairs are separated in Anaphase I, and two cells, each with only two chromosomes, are produced. REDUCTION

II. Meiosis and the Chromosomal Theory A.Overview B.Costs and Benefits of Asexual and Sexual Reproduction C.Mixing Genomes D.Meiosis 1. Overview 2. Meiosis I (Reduction) 3. Transition 4. Meiosis II (Division) Each cell with two chromosomes divides; sister chromatids are separated. There is no change in ploidy in this cycle; haploid cells divide to produce haploid cells. DIVISION

5. Modifications in anisogamous and oogamous species

II. Meiosis and the Chromosomal Theory A.Overview B.Costs and Benefits of Asexual and Sexual Reproduction C.Mixing Genomes D.Meiosis E.Sexual Reproduction and Variation 1. Meiosis and Mendelian Heredity: The chromosomal theory of inheritance

D.Meiosis E.Sexual Reproduction and Variation 1. Meiosis and Mendelian Heredity: The chromosomal theory Saw homologous chromosomes separating (segregating). If they carried genes, this would explain Mendel’s first law. Theodor Boveri Walter Sutton Aa

D.Meiosis E.Sexual Reproduction and Variation 1. Meiosis and Mendelian Heredity: The chromosomal theory And if the way one pair of homologs separated had no effect on how others separated, then the movement of chromosomes would explain Mendel’s second law, also! They proposed that chromosomes carry the heredity information. Theodor Boveri Walter Sutton Aa Aa bBBb ABabAbaB OR

D.Meiosis E.Sexual Reproduction and Variation 1. Meiosis and Mendelian Heredity: The chromosomal theory 2. Solving Darwin’s Dilemma Independent Assortment produces an amazing amount of genetic variation. Consider an organism, 2n = 4, with two pairs of homologs. They can make 4 different gametes (long Blue, Short Red) (Long Blue, Short Blue), (Long Red, Short Red), (Long Red, Short blue). Gametes carry thousands of genes, so homologous chromosomes will not be identical over their entire length, even though they may be homozygous at particular loci. Well, the number of gametes can be calculated as 2 n or

D.Meiosis E.Sexual Reproduction and Variation 1. Meiosis and Mendelian Heredity: The chromosomal theory 2. Solving Darwin’s Dilemma Independent Assortment produces an amazing amount of genetic variation. Consider an organism with 2n = 6 (AaBbCc) …. There are 2 n = 8 different gamete types. ABCabc AbcabC aBCAbc AbCaBc

D.Meiosis E.Sexual Reproduction and Variation 1. Meiosis and Mendelian Heredity: The chromosomal theory 2. Solving Darwin’s Dilemma Independent Assortment produces an amazing amount of genetic variation. Consider an organism with 2n = 6 (AaBbCc) …. There are 2 n = 8 different gamete types. And humans, with 2n = 46?

D.Meiosis E.Sexual Reproduction and Variation 1. Meiosis and Mendelian Heredity: The chromosomal theory 2. Solving Darwin’s Dilemma Independent Assortment produces an amazing amount of genetic variation. Consider an organism with 2n = 6 (AaBbCc) …. There are 2 n = 8 different gamete types. And humans, with 2n = 46? 2 23 = ~ 8 million different types of gametes. And each can fertilize ONE of the ~ 8 million types of gametes of the mate… for a total 2 46 = ~70 trillion different chromosomal combinations possible in the offspring of a single pair of mating humans.

D.III. Meiosis E.Sexual Reproduction and Variation 1. Meiosis and Mendelian Heredity: The chromosomal theory 2. Solving Darwin’s Dilemma 3. Model of Evolution – circa 1905 Sources of VariationCauses of Change Independent Assortment  VARIATION  NATURAL SELECTION