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MEIOSIS AND CROSSING OVER

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Title: MEIOSIS AND CROSSING OVER


1
MEIOSIS AND CROSSING OVER
2
Chromosomes are matched in homologous pairs
Chromosomes
  • Homologous chromosomes the 2 members of a pair
    of chromosomescontain genes for the same traits
  • Somatic cells of each species contain a specific
    number of chromosomes
  • Human cells have 46, making up 23 pairs of
    homologous chromosomes

Sister chromatids
3
Paired chromosomes
  • Homologous chromosomes
  • both chromosomes of a pair carry matching genes
  • control same inherited characters
  • homologous same information

diploid2n 2n 4
eye color (brown?)
eye color (blue?)
homologouschromosomes
double strandedhomologous chromosomes
4
Gametes have a single set of chromosomes
  • Gametes egg or sperm
  • Cells with two sets of chromosomes are said to be
    diploid (2n) somatic cells(46 in humans)
  • Gametes are haploid, with only one set of
    chromosomes, (1n)(23 in humans)

5
Human female karyotype
diploid 2 copies
2n
46 chromosomes 23 pairs
XX
6
Human male karyotype
diploid 2 copies
2n
46 chromosomes 23 pairs
XY
7
Life Cycle
  • At fertilization, a sperm fuses with an egg,
    forming a diploid zygote
  • Repeated mitotic divisions lead to the
    development of a mature adult
  • The adult makes haploid gametes by meiosis
  • All of these processes make up the sexual life
    cycle of organisms

8
Why meiosis?
  • When cells divide by mitosis, the new cells have
    exactly the same number and kind of chromosomes
    as the original cells.
  • Imagine if mitosis were the only means of cell
    division.
  • IF the parent organism has 14 chromosomes, it
    would produce gametes that contained a complete
    set of 14 chromosomes
  • The offspring would have cell nuclei with 28
    chromosomes, and the next generation would have
    cell nuclei with 56 chromosomes

9
Meiosis reduces the chromosome number from
diploid to haploid
  • Meiosis, like mitosis, is preceded by chromosome
    duplication
  • However, in meiosis the cell divides twice to
    form four daughter cells
  • In the first division, meiosis I, homologous
    chromosomes are paired
  • While they are paired, they cross over and
    exchange genetic information
  • The homologous pairs are then separated, and two
    daughter cells are produced

10
Meiosis I
  • In the first division, meiosis I, homologous
    chromosomes are paired
  • As the chromosomes coil, homologous chromosomes
    line up with each other gene by gene along their
    length, to form a four-part structure called a
    tetrad.Here synaspsis occurs the meeting of two
    homologous pairs
  • While they are paired, they cross over and
    exchange genetic information
  • The homologous pairs are then separated, and two
    daughter cells are produced
  • Division in meiosis I occurs in four phases
    prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase

11
Meiosis 1 overview
doublestranded
Divide 1
  • 1st division of meiosis

Copy DNA before meiosis
Line Up 1
prophase 1
metaphase 1
  • 4 chromosomes
  • diploid
  • 2n

telophase 1
  • 2 chromosomes
  • haploid
  • 1n

gamete
12
Meiosis II
  • Meiosis II is essentially the same as mitosis
  • The sister chromatids of each chromosome separate
  • The result is four haploid daughter cells

13
Meiosis 2 overview
Bye Bye 2
telophase 2
telophase 1
Line Up 2
  • 2nd division of meiosis
  • looks like mitosis

metaphase 2
  • 2 chromosomes
  • haploid
  • 1n

gametes
14
Review A comparison of mitosis and meiosis
  • For both processes, chromosomes replicate only
    once, during interphase

15
Review A comparison of mitosis and meiosis
16
Genetic variation
  • Each chromosome of a homologous pair comes from a
    different parent
  • The large number of possible arrangements of
    chromosome pairs at metaphase I of meiosis leads
    to many different combinations of chromosomes in
    gametes
  • Random fertilization also increases variation in
    offspring

17
Crossing over further increases genetic
variability
  • Crossing over is the exchange of corresponding
    segments between two homologous chromosomes
  • Genetic recombination results from crossing over
    during prophase I of meiosis
  • This increases variation further

18
Errors of Meiosis Chromosomal Abnormalities
19
Chromosomal abnormalities
  • Incorrect number of chromosomes
  • nondisjunction
  • chromosomes dont separate properly during
    meiosis
  • breakage of chromosomes
  • deletion
  • duplication
  • inversion
  • translocation

20
ALTERATIONS OF CHROMOSOME NUMBER AND STRUCTURE
  • A karyotype is a photographic inventory of an
    individuals chromosomes
  • Human female karyotype

21
An extra copy of chromosome 21 causes Down
syndrome
  • This karyotype shows three number 21 chromosomes
    trisomy 21
  • An extra copy of chromosome 21 causes Down
    syndrome
  • The chance of having a Down syndrome child goes
    up with maternal age

22
Down syndrome age of mother
Mothers age Incidence of Down Syndrome
Under 30 lt1 in 1000
30 1 in 900
35 1 in 400
36 1 in 300
37 1 in 230
38 1 in 180
39 1 in 135
40 1 in 105
42 1 in 60
44 1 in 35
46 1 in 20
48 1 in 16
49 1 in 12
  • Rate of miscarriage due to amniocentesis
  • 1970s data0.5, or 1 in 200 pregnancies
  • 2006 datalt0.1, or 1 in 1600 pregnancies

23
Accidents during meiosis can alter chromosome
number
  • Nondisjunction The failure of homologous
    chromosomes to separate properly during meiosis
  • Abnormal chromosome count will result.

24
Nondisjunction
  • Problems in meiosis cause errors in daughter
    cells
  • chromosome pairs do not separate properly during
    Meiosis 1
  • sister chromatids fail to separate during Meiosis
    2
  • too many or too few chromosomes

2n
n-1
n1
25
Abnormal numbers of sex chromosomes do not
usually affect survival
  • Nondisjunction can also produce gametes with
    extra or missing sex chromosomes
  • A man with Klinefelter syndrome has an extra X
    chromosome
  • A woman with Turner syndrome lacks an X
    chromosome

26
Klinefelters syndrome
  • XXY male
  • one in every 2000 live births
  • have male sex organs, but are sterile
  • feminine characteristics
  • some breast development
  • lack of facial hair
  • tall
  • normal intelligence

27
Klinefelters syndrome
28
Turner syndrome
  • Monosomy X or X0
  • 1 in every 5000 births
  • varied degree of effects
  • webbed neck
  • short stature
  • sterile

29
Nondisjunction
  • When a gamete with an extra set of chromosomes
    is fertilized by a normal haploid gamete, the
    offspring has three sets of chromosomes and is
    triploid.(3n)
  • The fusion of two gametes, each with an extra
    set of chromosomes, produces offspring with
    four sets of chromosomesa tetraploid. (4n)
  • This is polyploidy.

30
Alterations of chromosome structure can cause
birth defects and cancer
Deletion
  • Chromosome breakage can lead to rearrangements
    that can produce genetic disorders or cancer
  • Four types of rearrangement are deletion,
    duplication, inversion, and translocation

Duplication
Inversion
Reciprocaltranslocation
Nonhomologouschromosomes
31
Changes in chromosome structure
  • deletion
  • loss of a chromosomal segment
  • duplication
  • repeat a segment
  • inversion
  • reverses a segment
  • translocation
  • move segment from one chromosome to another
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