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Published byBenedict Stanley Hawkins Modified over 8 years ago
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Meiosis and Sexual Life Cycles Unit 3 – Chapter 13
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Diploid vs. Haploid A cell that has both members of a homologous pair of chromosomes in the nucleus, is considered to be Diploid (2n) A cell that has only one homologue of a chromosome pair (so either the maternal or paternal homologue is missing) is considered Haploid (n)
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Karyotypes are made from cells arrested at metaphase KARYOTYPE OF A DIPLOID CELLKARYOTYPE OF A HAPLOID CELL
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Importance of Meiosis Reduces the number of chromosomes by half – the cell goes from diploid (2n) to haploid (n) – humans go from 23 pairs to 23 single chromosomes Prevents polyploidy (multiple chromosomes) – and maintains the chromosome number of each species Produces genetic variation and contributes to evolution
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The Human Life Cycle
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Spermatogenesis
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OVULATION
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Egg and Fallopian Tube Lining
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Egg and Fertilization
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Zygote and First Mitotic Division
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Sexual Life Cycles Produce Genetic Variation Among Offspring Independent Assortment Crossing Over Random Fertilization
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Independent Assortment The orientation of the homologous chromosomes at the metaphase plate in metaphase I is completely random The maternal and paternal homologues can be on either side of the plate There is a 50% chance that a daughter cell of meiosis I will get a maternal homologue of a particular chromosome pair and a 50% chance that it will get the paternal homologue
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Independent Assortment The number of combinations possible for gametes formed by meiosis can be determined by 2 n, where 2 is the number of chromosomes per homologous pair and n is the haploid number of that organism. So for human – 2 23 = ~8 million chromosomal combinations possible in gametes
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Independent Assortment
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Crossing Over This adds even more variation to gametes Each time the homologous chromosomes swap alleles, the possible number of chromosomal combinations in gametes is increased even further
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Random Fertilization A human egg that represents one of ~8 million possible chromosomal combinations, is fertilized by a sperm that represents one of ~8 million chromosomal possible combinations So even without crossing over occurring, the zygote will contain one of 64 trillion (8 million x 8 million) chromosomal combinations!!
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