1 / 10

Meiosis 8.3 (p. 153-156)

Meiosis 8.3 (p. 153-156). Meiosis = cell division that reduces the number of chromosomes in half Diploid number to haploid number Gametes = sex cells; have haploid number (male: sperm, female: egg) Like a double mitosis: PMAT I and PMAT II, with some key differences. Diploid =

ghita
Download Presentation

Meiosis 8.3 (p. 153-156)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Meiosis 8.3 (p. 153-156) Meiosis = cell division that reduces the number of chromosomes in half • Diploid number to haploid number • Gametes = sex cells; have haploid number (male: sperm, female: egg) • Like a double mitosis: PMAT I and PMAT II, with some key differences Diploid = Haploid =

  2. Meiosis 8.3 (p. 153-156) Prophase I = homologous chromosomes pair up • Called synapsis; chromosome pairs called tetrads (tetra = 4) • Crossing-over = chromatids swap genes; happens sometimes causing genetic variation • Genetic recombination = new mix of genes from crossing-over

  3. Meiosis 8.3 (p. 153-156) Metaphase I = tetrads line up along the equator • Homologous pairs line up next to each other • Key difference

  4. Meiosis 8.3 (p. 153-156) Anaphase I = homologous chromosomes move to opposite poles • Big difference: each chromosomes still has 2 chromatids • That is the centromeres don’t split

  5. Meiosis 8.3 (p. 153-156) TelophaseI = 2 cells separate, but now each cell has haploid number of chromosomes

  6. Meiosis 8.3 (p. 153-156) PMAT II = looks very much like mitosis but at the end it has haploid number (1n) • Single chromatid is not copied during an interphase stage • Instead these gametes will match up chromatids when they fuse with another sex cell • Zygote = sperm and egg fused to form new cell again with diploid number (2n)

  7. Meiosis 8.3 (p. 153-156) Sexual reproduction = reproduction by forming a zygote (male and female) • Offspring is genetically unique Asexual reproduction = reproduction from one parent • By binary fission or mitosis only, no meiosis • Offspring is genetically identical to parent

More Related