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Honors Biology Unit 5 2011-2012 1
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Genome: Complete complement of an organism’s DNA. ◦ Includes genes (control traits) and non-coding DNA organized in chromosomes. 2
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Eukaryotic DNA is organized in chromosomes. ◦ Genes have specific places on chromosomes. 3
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Heredity – way of transferring genetic information to offspring Chromosome theory of heredity: chromosomes carry genes. Gene – “unit of heredity”. 4
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Asexual ◦ Many single-celled organisms reproduce by splitting, budding, parthenogenesis. ◦ Some multicellular organisms can reproduce asexually, produce clones (offspring genetically identical to parent). 5
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Fusion of two gametes to produce a single zygote. With exception of self-fertilizing organisms (e.g. some plants), zygote has gametes from two different parents. 6
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23 chromosomes donated by each parent Total = 46 or 23 pairs Gametes (sperm/ova): haploid (n) ◦ Haploid= Contains a single set of chromosomes (23) Zygote fertilized egg - now diploid (2n). ◦ Diploid= Contains a two sets of chromosomes (23x2=46) Somatic cell: any cell other than gametes, most of the cells in the body. – diploid (2n) 8
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Autosomes: ◦ Code for most genes in your body (not sex determining chromosomes) ◦ In humans chromosome #1-22
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Sex Chromosomes: ◦ chromosome that determines what gender you will be. ◦ #23 in humans ◦ Females are: XX ◦ Males are XY
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Mammals use a chromosomal method of determining sex: XX is female and XY is male. Birds use a ZW system: ZZ is male and ZW is female. ◦ the evolutionary origin of mammalian and bird sex chromosomes is different Some reptiles use developmental temperature to determine sex: depends on the species, but hot is male and cold is female in some.
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Chromosomes exist in homologous pairs in diploid cells. 12 Exception: Sex chromosomes (X, Y). All autosomes are in homologous pairs.
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13 All are even numbers – diploid (2n) sets of homologous chromosomes! Ploidy = number of copies of each chromosome. Diploidy
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Meiosis: cell division process by which the number of chromosomes per cell is cut in half Why does it occur: Meiosis is used to produce the haploid(n) gametes. 14
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Meiosis reduces the number of chromosomes by half. Daughter cells differ from parent, and each other. Meiosis involves two divisions, Mitosis only one. 15
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First division of meiosis Prophase 1: Duplicated homologous chromosomes match up forming tetrads. Crossing-over occurs at the chiasmata. Crossing-over Metaphase 1: Tetrads align at the equator of the cell. Anaphase 1: Homologous pairs separate with sister chromatids remaining together. Telophase 1: Two daughter cells are formed with each daughter containing only one chromosome of the homologous pair. 16
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Second division of meiosis: Gamete formation Prophase 2: DNA does not replicate. Metaphase 2: Chromosomes line up at the equatorial. Anaphase 2: Sister chromatids move separately to opposite ends of the cell. Telophase 2: Cell division is complete. Four haploid(n) daughter cells are produced. 18
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Meiosis KM20
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Meiosis KM21
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Meiosis KM22
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During normal cell growth, mitosis produces daughter cells identical to parent cell (2n to 2n) Meiosis results in genetic variation by: ◦ Shuffling of maternal and paternal chromosomes and crossing over. ◦ No daughter cells formed during meiosis are genetically identical to either mother or father ◦ During sexual reproduction, fusion of the unique haploid gametes produces truly unique offspring. 23
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Meiosis KM24
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Number of combinations: 2 n 25 e.g. 2 chromosomes in haploid 2n = 4; n = 2 2 n = 2 2 = 4 possible combinations
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26 e.g. 23 chromosomes in haploid 2n = 46; n = 23 2 n = 2 23 = ~ 8 million possible combinations!
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27 Crossing over produces recombinant chromosomes, mixing the genes of the mother and father, recombining them. Chiasmata – sites of crossing over
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At least 8 million combinations from Mom, and another 8 million from Dad … >64 trillion combinations for a diploid zygote!!! Meiosis KM29
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In males, all 4 products of meiosis develop into sperm cells. They lose most of their cytoplasm, remodel their cell shape, and grow a long flagellum (tail). Male gamete formation - Spermatogenesis
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In females, most of the cytoplasm goes into 1 of the 4 meiotic products, which becomes the egg. The other 3 meiotic cells are small “polar bodies”, which degenerate. Female gamete formation - Oogenesis
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More genetic diversity: more potential for survival of species when environmental conditions change. ◦ Shuffling of genes in meiosis ◦ Crossing-over in meiosis ◦ Fertilization: combines genes from 2 separate individuals DNA back-up and repair. ◦ Asexual organisms don't have back-up copies of genes, sexual organisms have 2 sets of chromosomes and one can act as a back-up if the other is damaged. ◦ Sexual mechanisms, especially recombination, are used to repair damaged DNA - the undamaged chromosome acts as a template and eventually both chromosomes end up with the correct gene. 32
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1. What happens as homologous chromosomes pair up during prophase I of meiosis? 2. How does metaphase of mitosis differ from metaphase I of meiosis? 3. What is the sole purpose of meiosis? 4. What specific activities, involving DNA, occur during interphase prior to both mitosis and meiosis? 33
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5. Compare mitosis and meiosis on the following points: a. number of daughter cells produced. b. the amount of DNA in the daughter v. parent cell c. mechanism for introducing genetic variation. 6. What is a zygote and how is it formed? 34
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