Meiosis Reading
Meiosis Reading
Meiosis Reading
Introduction to Meiosis
Sexual reproduction combines gametes from two parents. Gametes are reproductive cells, such as sperm and egg. As gametes are
produced, the number of chromosomes must be reduced by half. Why? The zygote must contain genetic information from the mother
and from the father, so the gametes must contain half of the chromosomes found in normal body cells. When two gametes come
together at fertilization, the normal amount of chromosomes results. Gametes are produced by a special type of cell division known
as meiosis . Meiosis contains two rounds of cell division without DNA replication in between. This process reduces the number of
chromosomes by half.
Human cells have 23 pairs of chromosomes, and each chromosome within a pair is called a homologous chromosome . For each of
the 23 chromosome pairs, you received one chromosome from your father and one chromosome from your mother. Alleles are
alternate forms of genes found on chromosomes. Homologous chromosomes have the same genes, though they may have different
alleles. So, though homologous chromosomes are very similar, they are not identical. The homologous chromosomes are separated
when gametes are formed. Therefore, gametes have only 23 chromosomes, not 23 pairs.
Overview of Meiosis
Before meiosis begins, DNA replication occurs, so each chromosome contains two sister chromatids that are identical to the original
chromosome. Meiosis (Figure below) is divided into two divisions: Meiosis I and Meiosis II. Each division can be divided into the same
phases: prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase. Cytokinesis follows telophase each time. Between the two cell divisions, DNA
replication does not occur. Through this process, one diploid cell will divide into four haploid cells.
Overview of Meiosis. During meiosis, four haploid cells are created from one diploid parent cell.
Meiosis I
During meiosis I, the pairs of homologous chromosomes are separated from each other. This requires that they line up in their
homologous pairs during metaphase I. The steps are outlined below:
1.
Prophase I: The homologous chromosomes line up together. During this time, a process that only happens in meiosis can
occur. This process is called crossing-over ( Figure below ), which is the exchange of DNA between homologous chromosomes.
Crossing-over forms new combinations of alleles on the resulting chromosome. Without crossing-over, the offspring would always
inherit all of the alleles on one of the homologous chromosomes. Also during prophase I, the spindle forms, the chromosomes
condense as they coil up tightly, and the nuclear envelope disappears.
2.
Metaphase I: The homologous chromosomes line up in their pairs in the middle of the cell. Chromosomes from the mother or
from the father can each attach to either side of the spindle. Their attachment is random, so all of the chromosomes from the
mother or father do not end up in the same gamete. The gamete will contain some chromosomes from the mother and some
chromosomes from the father.
3.
Anaphase I: The homologous chromosomes are separated as the spindle shortens, and begin to move to opposite sides of the
cell.
4.
Telophase I: The spindle fibers dissolves, but a new nuclear envelope does not need to form. This is because, after
cytokinesis, the nucleus will immediately begin to divide again. No DNA replication occurs between meiosis I and meiosis II
because the chromosomes are already duplicated. After cytokinesis, two haploid cells result, each with chromosomes made of
sister chromatids.
Since the separation of chromosomes into gametes is random during meiosis I, this process results in different combinations of
chromosomes (and alleles) in each gamete. With 23 pairs of chromosomes, there is a possibility of over 8 million different combinations
of chromosomes (223 ) in a human gamete.
During crossing-over, segments of DNA are exchanged between non-sister chromatids of homologous chromosomes. Notice how this
can result in an allele (A) on one chromatid being moved onto the other non-sister chromatid.
Meiosis II
During meiosis II, the sister chromatids are separated and the gametes are generated.
This cell division is similar to that of mitosis , but results in four genetically unique haploid
cells. The steps are outlined below:
1.
2.
Vocabulary
Meiosis
1.
Gamete cells
or
Somatic cells
Liver cell =
Egg cell =
Stomach cell =
4. If the diploid number in a liver cell is 52, how many chromosomes are there in the egg of this organism? _________
5. During meiosis, the chromosome number:
a) is doubled
b) is reduced
d) becomes diploid
6. Cells starting mitosis & meiosis begin with a (haploid or diploid) set of chromosomes.
Figure 2
b) Prophase II
d) Anaphase II
17. What is the ultimate goal/purpose of mitosis? What term do we use to describe the new cells?
18. What is the difference between chromosomes, chromatids, and homologous chromosomes? You may draw a picture as your answer.
24. What does Meiosis create? Haploids or Diploid? Somatic cells or gametes?