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Published byDenis Young Modified over 8 years ago
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MEIOSIS INTRODUCTION
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What is a chromosome? A piece of coiled DNA How many chromosomes do human cells have? 46 (in non-sex cells) Do ALL humans have the same number of chromosomes in their cells? YES! (Except people with genetic disorders causing extra chromosomes or missing chromosomes) Where did the 46 chromosomes come from? CHROMOSOMES
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If we get our chromosomes from our parent, why do we not have a total of 92 (46 from mom and 46 from dad)? How does each parent manage to only give 23 chromosomes to their child? TURN TO A FRIEND AND DISCUSS…
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YOU were made from one cell from your mom and one cell from your dad. So, how is it the same? Shouldn’t you have double the number of chromosomes? No, the number is the same because the egg and sperm cells only have half the number of chromosomes, so when they combine they have the full 46. SO, sex cells have how many chromosomes? 23 chromosomes SO…
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How are gametes (sex cells) formed, if they only have 23 chromosomes? Through a process called MEIOSIS Meiosis is similar to mitosis but has some differences. SEX CELLS -- GAMETES
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MEIOSIS Living things inherit a single copy of each gene from each of their parents. The genes are on chromosomes Homologous chromosomes from the male parent correspond(pair) to the chromosomes from the female parent.
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HAPLOID Gametes are haploid(n)- they contain only a single set of chromosomes. Humans have 23 chromosomes in our gametes.
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DIPLOID When gametes join, a diploid(2n) zygote is formed. It contains two copies of each chromosome. A human zygote has 46 chromosomes
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MEIOSIS SUMMARIZED The process of nuclear division where the number of the chromosomes is halved. Produces four daughter cells All daughter cells are haploid Chromosomes are shuffled in process called CROSSING OVER so that each daughter cell has a unique combination used to create gametes (sperm and egg)
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CROSSING-OVER Crossing Over- when homologous chromosomes are paired up during Prophase I they can exchange genetic information leading to diversity.
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There are two stages of Meiosis. Meiosis I results in two haploid (N) daughter cells. Each with half the number of chromosomes as the original cell.
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MEIOSIS II The two cells produced by meiosis I enter a second meiotic division, meiosis II. Unlike meiosis I, neither cell goes through a round of chromosome replication before entering meiosis II. Each of the cell’s chromosomes has 2 chromatids.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=toW K0fIyFlY https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=toW K0fIyFlY https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1- RKH5eVJVM https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1- RKH5eVJVM https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iCL6 d0OwKt8 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iCL6 d0OwKt8 MEIOSIS
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Mitosis results in… Two IDENTICAL daughter cells—no genetic diversity same number of chromosomes as parent Meiosis results in… FOUR daughter cells—that are different from parent cells, resulting in genetic diversity Chromosome number half that of the parent cell. MITOSIS VS. MEIOSIS—PRIMARY DIFFERENCE
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