150 likes | 260 Views
Warm Up. Locate your notes on mutations Be prepared to share what you learned about mutations with the class. . Meiosis Part I. Monday; March 19, 2012. Essential Questions. How can mitosis and meiosis each contribute to the production of offspring with varying traits?
E N D
Warm Up • Locate your notes on mutations • Be prepared to share what you learned about mutations with the class.
Meiosis Part I Monday; March 19, 2012
Essential Questions • How can mitosis and meiosis each contribute to the production of offspring with varying traits? • How can sexual reproduction (meiosis) result in a great variety of possible gene combinations and contribute to natural selection?
What is Meiosis? • Meiosis – Produces gametes containing half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell • Occurs only in the sex organs • Gametes – male (sperm) and female (egg) sex cells produced by specialized body organs • Humans: • Body Cell – 46 chromosomes • Sex Cell (Gamete) – 23 chromosomes
Importance of Meiosis • Without Meiosis, all offspring resulting from fertilization would have twice the amount of genetic information as its parents. • If too much genetic information is present within the nucleus, it can have adverse effects on the offspring.
Importance of Meiosis • Meiosis solves this issue by producing gametes with half the amount of genetic information as the parent. • Allows for sexual reproduction and therefore, genetic variation
Crossing Over • Crossing over – when genetic material is exchanged due to the tight pairing of homologous chromosomes • Occurs during Prophase I (in Meiosis I) • 2 – 3 crossovers per pair of chromosomes • Results in new combinations of alleles and genetic variation • Allele – alternative forms of a gene, and therefore a trait
Meiosis • Consist of two separate divisions • Meiosis I • Starts with 1 Diploid (2n) cell and results in 2 Diploid (2n) cells • Meiosis II • Starts with 2 Diploid (2n) cells and results in 4 Haploid (n) cells • Males = 4 Haploid sperm cells • Females = 1 Hapoid egg cell and 3 haploid polar bodies
Phases of Meiosis I 1. Interphase 2. Meiosis I A. Prophase I (Crossing over occurs) B. Metaphase I C. Anaphase I D. Telophase I
Interphase • Begins with a single 2n parent cell that is located in the sex organ • DNA is replicated resulting in a cell with 4 times the amount of chromosomes (4n) • After replication, two identical sister chromatids are present
Prophase I • Chromosomes and spindle fibers are present • Homologous chromosomes come together, matched gene by gene, to form a tetrad. • Tetrad – consist of two homologous chromosomes paired tightly together • Homologous chromosomes – paired chromosomes with genes for same traits arranged in the same order
Metaphase I • Centromeres of each chromosome become attached to a spindle fiber • Spindle fiber pulls the tetrad into the middle of the nucleus • Homologous chromosomes are lined up side by side as tetrads
Anaphase II • Homologous chromosomes separate and move to opposite ends of the cell • Centromeres holding the sister chromatidsdo not split • Each new cell receives only one chromosome from each homologous pair
Telophase I • Spindle fibers beak down • Chromosomes uncoil • Cytoplasm divides to yield two new cells • Resulting cells only have half the genetic information of original cell from each homologous pair
Meiosis I • Beginning of Meiosis I • 1 Diploid (2n) Parent cell, located in the sex organ, was present • End of Meiosis I • 2 Diploid (2n) Daughter cells, located in the sex organ, is present • These 2 Diploid Daughter Cell will divide again during Meiosis II • Meiosis Video