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Meiosis Notes 4 Cell division to form the gametes, sperm (male gamete) and egg (female gamete). 4 Normal cells are diploid: 2 copies of every gene. 4 Gametes are haploid: 1 copy of every gene
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Number of Chromosomes
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Overview of Meiosis 4 2 cell divisions. 4 Starts with 2 copies of each chromosome (homologous), each with 2 chromatids (copies of DNA). 4 In meiosis I, homologous chromosomes are separated into 2 cells. 4 In Meiosis II the chromatids are separated into 4 cells.
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Meiosis I (PMAT I) 4 PROPHASE I - The homologous chromosomes pair together (Sometimes crossing over occurs). 4 METAPHASE I - The pairs of homologous chromosomes line up along the middle 4 ANAPHASE I - Homologous chromosomes are pulled apart. 4 TELOPHASE I - One cell becomes two cells with one chromosome of the pair (haploid)
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Meiosis II (PMAT II) 4 PROPHASE II – Prepare to divide 4 METAPHASE II – Chromosomes line up in the middle 4 ANAPHASE II – Chromatids (copies of DNA) pull apart 4 TELOPHASE II – The end result is four cells with one copy of each gene.
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Interphase Mother cell Stages Of Meiosis: Meiosis I Meiosis II Prophase I: Tetrad formation/ crossing over Prophase I: Tetrad formation/ crossing over Metaphase I Telophase I Prophase I: Condensing Chromosomes Prophase I: Condensing Chromosomes Anaphase I
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Telophase I Stages Of Meiosis: Meiosis II Metaphase II Anaphase II Telophase II The products of meiosis are 4 haploid cells each with a unique set of chromosomes. Prophase II
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Segregation 4 In humans meiosis starts with one cell containing 46 chromosomes (23 pairs) and results in four cells containing 23 chromosomes. 4 The copies of DNA are separated when gametes are formed.
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Independent Assortment 4 Homologous chromosomes are positioned randomly so any copy can be passed to the gametes with any combination of other chromosomes 4 There are 2 n combinations possible during meiosis with n the haploid number of chromosomes for the organism
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How many combinations are possible in human meiosis? 4 Possible combinations: 2 n 4 n=23 in humans 4 2 23 =about 8,300,000 combinations
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Crossing Over 4 During Prophase I, the exchange of genetic material between homologous chromosomes
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Prophase I: Tetrad formation/ crossing over Prophase I: Tetrad formation/ crossing over Crossing Over Anaphase I Telophase II Metaphase I Telophase I Because of crossing over, every gamete receives a unique set of genetic information.
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Fertilization 4 The combination of a sperm and an egg which forms a zygote. 4 1 sperm (1 of 8 million possible chromosome combinations) x 1 ovum (1 of 8 million different possibilities) = 64 trillion diploid combinations!
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Egg Haploid nucleus Fertilization Results In A Diploid Zygote Sperm Haploid nucleus
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Sperm Fertilization Results In A Diploid Zygote Egg Haploid nucleus Haploid nucleus
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Sperm Fertilization Results In A Diploid Zygote Egg Haploid nucleus Haploid nucleus
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Sperm Fertilization Results In A Diploid Zygote Egg Haploid nucleus Haploid nucleus
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From Zygote to Embryo Zygote 2n Zygote Diploid
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Mitosis From Zygote to Embryo
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Mitosis From Zygote to Embryo
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Mitosis From Zygote to Embryo
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Mitosis From Zygote to Embryo
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Twins
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Monozygotic Twins (Identical) 4 1/3 of all twins are identical 4 Twins that form from one zygote (one egg fertilized by one sperm). 4 These twins have identical genes and must be the same sex. 4 Having identical twins is random, not genetic
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Dizygotic Twins (fraternal) 4 2/3 of all twins are fraternal 4 Twins that form from two zygotes (two eggs fertilized by two sperm) 4 Can be the same sex or different sexes. 4 The ability to have fraternal twins is thought to be genetic.
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Phenotype The way an ORGANISM LOOKS
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Genotype THE GENETIC MAKEUP OF AN ORGANISM
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Dominant and Recessive Traits
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Dominant Traits Characteristics you can always see if you have the genes.
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Symbol 4 capital letters
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Recessive Traits Characteristics you cannot see if you have a dominant gene.
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Symbol 4 lower case letters
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