Title: Meiosis and Sexual Reproduction
1Chapter 10
- Meiosis and Sexual Reproduction
2Why Sex
Fig. 10-1b, p.154
3Why sex?
4Why sex?
- Asexual
- Easier, faster
- Big population
- Indentical
- Bits can make whole indv.
- No new combos
- All inherit the same info
- Clones
- parthogenesis
- Sexual
- Changing env
- More variety
- New combos
- Involves meiosis (gametes) and fertilization
- allele
5Modes of Reproduction
- Sexual reproduction
- Meiosis, gamete formation, and fertilization
- Offspring show genetic variation
- Asexual reproduction
- Single parent produces offspring
- Offspring are genetically identical
6Cost of Sexual Reproduction
Fig. 43-2c, p.756
743.1 (p. 756)Cost of Sexual Reproduction
- Specialized cells and structures must be formed
- Special courtship, and parental behaviors can be
costly - Timing of gamete formation and mating
- Nurturing developing offspring, either in egg or
body, requires resources from mother
810.2 What Meiosis Does
- Meiosis nuclear division that divides parental
c-some by half in specialized reproductive
cells - Ex anther, ovules
anther
ovary
9Homologous Chromosomes Carry Different Alleles
- Homologous c-some same shape, length and
assortment of genes, line up with each other - Paternal and maternal chromosomes can carry
different alleles
10Chromosome Number
- Sum total of chromosomes in a cell
- Germ cells are diploid (2n)
- Gametes are haploid (n)
- Meiosis halves chromosome number
11Meiosis Two Divisions
- Two consecutive nuclear divisions
- Meiosis I aligns with partner
- Meiosis II sister chromatids separate
- DNA is not duplicated between divisions
- Four haploid nuclei form
1210.3 Tour of MeiosisProphase I
- Each duplicated chromosome pairs with homologue
(synapse) - Homologues swap segments (crossing over)
- Each chromosome becomes attached to spindle
Fig. 10-5, p. 158
13Metaphase I
- Chromosomes are pushed and pulled into the middle
of cell - The spindle is fully formed
Fig. 10-5, p. 158
14Anaphase I
- Homologous chromosomes segregate
- The sister chromatids remain attached
Fig. 10-5, p. 158
15Telophase I
- The chromosomes arrive at opposite poles
- Usually followed by cytoplasmic division
Fig. 10-5, p. 158
16Meosis II Prophase II
- Microtubules attach to the kinetochores of the
duplicated chromosomes - Attach to one chromatid of each chromosome
Fig. 10-5, p. 158
17Metaphase II
- Duplicated chromosomes line up at the spindle
equator, midway between the poles
Fig. 10-5, p. 158
18Anaphase II
- Sister chromatids separate to become independent
chromosomes - Attachments break
Fig. 10-5, p. 158
19Telophase II
- The chromosomes arrive at opposite ends of the
cell - A nuclear envelope forms around each set of
chromosomes - Four haploid cells
Fig. 10-5, p. 158
2010.4 Factors Contributing to Variation among
Offspring
- Crossing over during prophase I
- Independent assortment
- Random alignment of chromosomes at metaphase I
- Random combination of gametes at fertilization
21Crossing Over
- Each chromosome becomes zippered to its homologue
- All four chromatids are closely aligned
- Nonsister chromosomes exchange segments
22Effect of Crossing Over
- After crossing over, each chromosome contains
both maternal and paternal segments - Creates new allele combinations in offspring
23Independent Assortment
- Microtubules from spindle poles attach to
kinetochores of chromosomes randomly, between
Prophase I and Metaphase I
24Randomness cont.
- Either the maternal or paternal member of a
homologous pair can end up at either pole - The chromosomes in a gamete are a mix of
chromosomes from the two parents
25Possible Chromosome Combinations
-
- As a result of random alignment, the number of
possible combinations of chromosomes in a gamete
is - 2n
- (n is number of chromosome types)
26Fertilization
- Which two gametes unite is random
- Adds to variation among offspring
27Life Cycles
28Plant Life Cycle
sporophyte
zygote
diploid
fertilization
meiosis
haploid
spores
gametes
gametophytes
Fig. 10-8a, p.162
29Animal Life Cycle
multicelled body
zygote
diploid
meiosis
fertilization
haploid
gametes
Fig. 10-8b, p.162
3044.2Spermatogenesis
- Spermatogonium (2n) divides by mitosis to form
primary spermatocyte (2n) - Meiosis produces haploid spermatids
- Spermatids mature to become sperm
movie
Figure 44.4 Page 775
31Other Testicular Cells
- Sertoli cells
- Line the seminiferous tubules
- Nourish the developing sperm
- Leydig cells
- Lie between the seminiferous tubules
- Secrete testosterone
32Male Hormonal Control
Hypothalamus
GnRH
Inhibin
Anterior Pituitary
LH
FSH
Sertoli Cells
Leydig Cells
Testes
Testosterone
Formation and Development of Sperm
3344.1Oocytes Arrested in Meiosis I
- Girl is born with primary oocytes already in
ovaries - Each oocyte has entered meiosis I and stopped
- Meiosis resumes, one oocyte at a time, with the
first menstrual cycle
34Ovarian Cycle
secondary oocyte
first polar body
- Follicle grows and matures
- Ovulation occurs
- Corpus luteum forms
antrum
corpus luteum
primordial follicle
Figure 44.8 Page 778
35A transparent and somewhat elastic layer, the
zona pellucida, starts forming around the primary
oocyte.
Primary oocyte, not yet released from meiosis I.
A cell layer is forming around it. A follicle
consists of the cell layer and the oocyte.
A fluid-filled cavity (antrum) starts forming in
the follicles cell layer.
Mature follicle. Meiosis I is over. The secondary
oocyte and first polar body are now formed.
primordial follicle
first polar body
secondary oocyte
The corpus luteum breaks down when the woman
doesnt get pregnant.
A corpus luteum forms from remnants of the
ruptured follicle.
Ovulation. Mature follicle ruptures and releases
the secondary oocyte and the first polar body.
Fig. 44-8b, p.778
36Female Hormonal Control
Hypothalamus
GnRH
Rising estrogen stimulates surge in LH
Anterior pituitary
Progesterone, estrogens
LH
FSH
Ovary
follicle growth, oocyte maturation
Estrogen
Corpus luteum forms
37 Mitosis Meiosis Compared
- Mitosis
- Functions
- Asexual reproduction
- Growth, repair
- Occurs in somatic cells
- Produces clones
- Meiosis
- Function
- Sexual reproduction
- Occurs in germ cells
- Produces variable offspring
38Prophase vs. Prophase I
- Prophase (Mitosis)
- Homologous pairs do not interact with each other
- Prophase I (Meiosis)
- Homologous pairs become zippered together and
crossing over occurs
39 Anaphase, Anaphase I, and Anaphase II
- Anaphase I (Meiosis)
- Homologous chromosomes separate from each other
- Anaphase/Anaphase II (Mitosis/Meiosis)
- Sister chromatids of a chromosome separate from
each other
40Results of Mitosis and Meiosis
- Mitosis
- Two diploid cells produced
- Each identical to parent
- Meiosis
- Four haploid cells produced
- Differ from parent and one another
41An Ancestral Connection
- Was sexual reproduction a giant evolutionary step
from aseuxal reproduction? - Giardia intestinalis
- Chlamydomonas
- Recombination mechanisms are vital for
reproduction of euk cells may have evolved from
DNA repair mechanisms in prok ancestors