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Meiosis occurs in what type of cells? Reproductive cells (the ones that divide to form sperm and eggs) What is “reduction division?” -Cell division that reduces the amount of DNA from parent cell to daughter cells -In meiosis, the chromosome number is cut in half What do the terms “haploid” and “diploid” mean? •Diploid refers to a cell that has two copies of every chromosome: 1 from mom and 1 from dad •Haploid refers to a cell
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Meiosis occurs in what type of cells? Reproductive cells (the ones that divide to form sperm and eggs) What is “reduction division?” -Cell division that.

Jan 15, 2016

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Elinor Gilbert
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Page 1: Meiosis occurs in what type of cells? Reproductive cells (the ones that divide to form sperm and eggs) What is “reduction division?” -Cell division that.

Meiosis occurs in what type of cells?

Reproductive cells (the ones that divide to form

sperm and eggs)

What is “reduction division?”

-Cell division that reduces the amount of DNA from parent cell to daughter cells-In meiosis, the chromosome number is cut in half

What do the terms “haploid” and “diploid”

mean?

•Diploid refers to a cell that has two copies of every chromosome: 1 from mom and 1 from dad•Haploid refers to a cell that has only 1 copy of every chromosome

Page 2: Meiosis occurs in what type of cells? Reproductive cells (the ones that divide to form sperm and eggs) What is “reduction division?” -Cell division that.

What are the diploid and haploid

chromosome numbers in humans?

Diploid (2N) cells = 46

chromosomes

Haploid (N) cells = 23

chromosomes

What are the only cells in a human that

are haploid?

Sex cells (gametes): sperm in males, eggs in females

Why do gametes (sperm and eggs)

need to be haploid?

•During sexual reproduction, a sperm cell fertilizes an egg cell and the two form a zygote. The zygote must be diploid.•If the sperm and egg were diploid, they would create a polyploid zygote that could not survive.

Page 3: Meiosis occurs in what type of cells? Reproductive cells (the ones that divide to form sperm and eggs) What is “reduction division?” -Cell division that.

Does interphase occur before meiosis?

Yes, all cells go through G1, S, and G2 no matter what type of

division they use

What is the result of meiosis?

1 diploid (2N) parent cell produces 4 genetically

different haploid (N) daughter cells

What are the two major phases of meiosis

called?

Meiosis I

and

Meiosis II

Page 4: Meiosis occurs in what type of cells? Reproductive cells (the ones that divide to form sperm and eggs) What is “reduction division?” -Cell division that.

What are the phases of meiosis I?

Prophase I, Metaphase I,

Anaphase I, and Telophase I

What are homologous chromosomes?

2 chromosomes that contain the same genes for the same

traits, but not necessarily the same alleles

When homologous chromosomes pair up, they form a structure

called a what?

tetrad

Page 5: Meiosis occurs in what type of cells? Reproductive cells (the ones that divide to form sperm and eggs) What is “reduction division?” -Cell division that.

“Tetra” means 4. What does this have to do with

a tetrad?

A tetrad is made up of 4 sister chromatids (2 chromosomes

each containing 2 chromatids)

Why do cells have homologous

chromosomes?

Every cell gets 1 copy from mom and 1 copy

from dad for every chromosome pair

What happens during Prophase I?

•The nucleolus and nuclear membrane “break up” and temporarily disappear.•Centrosomes and centrioles migrate to opposite sides of the cell•Spindle fibers grow from the centrioles and radiate toward the center of the cell.•Homologous chromosomes pair up to form tetrads and crossing-over can occur

Page 6: Meiosis occurs in what type of cells? Reproductive cells (the ones that divide to form sperm and eggs) What is “reduction division?” -Cell division that.

What is crossing-over? The process where homologous chromosomes

exchange genetic information by crossing arms,

breaking parts off of each chromosome, and switching

the pieces

Why doesn’t crossing-over occur in prophase

of mitosis?

Homologous chromosomes do not pair up to form

tetrads in mitosis.

Why is crossing-over beneficial?

It increases genetic diversity

Page 7: Meiosis occurs in what type of cells? Reproductive cells (the ones that divide to form sperm and eggs) What is “reduction division?” -Cell division that.

What happens during metaphase I?

Spindle fibers attach to the tetrads and help line the tetrads up across

the center of the cell on an imaginary line called the

metaphase plate or cell equator

What is the only difference between metaphase I of meiosis

and metaphase of mitosis?

In metaphase I of meiosis the tetrads line up, but in

metaphase of mitosis, individual chromosomes line up

What happens during anaphase I?

Spindle fibers shorten, separating the homologous

chromosomes. The chromosomes are pulled to

opposite ends of the cell

Page 8: Meiosis occurs in what type of cells? Reproductive cells (the ones that divide to form sperm and eggs) What is “reduction division?” -Cell division that.

What is the only difference between anaphase I of meiosis

and anaphase of mitosis?

In anaphase I of meiosis, homologous chromosomes are

separated, but the sister chromatids stay together. In anaphase of mitosis, sister chromatids are separated.

What happens during telophase I?

-The nuclear envelopes reappear-The spindle disappears-Cytokinesis occurs

What is the difference between the results of

mitosis and the results of meiosis I?

Mitosis produces 2 genetically identical, diploid daughter cells. Meiosis I produces 2 genetically different, haploid daughter cells.

Page 9: Meiosis occurs in what type of cells? Reproductive cells (the ones that divide to form sperm and eggs) What is “reduction division?” -Cell division that.

What are the phases of Meiosis II?

Prophase II, Metaphase II,

Anaphase II, and Telophase II

Does interphase occur before meiosis II?

No, interphase only occurs before meiosis I. The two cells made from meiosis I go directly into meiosis II

What happens during Prophase II?

•The nucleolus and nuclear membrane “break up” and temporarily disappear.•Centrosomes and Centrioles migrate to opposite sides of the cell•Spindle fibers grow from the centrioles and radiate toward the center of the cell.

Page 10: Meiosis occurs in what type of cells? Reproductive cells (the ones that divide to form sperm and eggs) What is “reduction division?” -Cell division that.

What happens during Metaphase II?

Spindle fibers attach to the chromosomes and help line the

chromosomes up across the center of the cell on an imaginary line

called the metaphase plate or cell equator

What happens during Anaphase II?

Spindle fibers shorten, breaking sister chromatids apart to form separate chromosomes. The chromosomes are pulled to opposite ends of the cell

What happens during Telophase II?

-Chromosomes begin to unwind back to chromatin.

-The nuclear envelope and nucleolus reappear in each daughter cell

-The spindle disappears

-Cytokinesis occurs

Page 11: Meiosis occurs in what type of cells? Reproductive cells (the ones that divide to form sperm and eggs) What is “reduction division?” -Cell division that.

How does meiosis II compare to mitosis?

They are the same except the final result: mitosis produces 2

genetically identical, diploid daughter cells, but meiosis II

produces 4 genetically different, haploid daughter cells.

What is spermatogenesis?

Meiosis that occurs in male reproductive cells to form

sperm.

What is oogenesis? Meiosis that occurs in female reproductive cells

to form eggs (ova)

Page 12: Meiosis occurs in what type of cells? Reproductive cells (the ones that divide to form sperm and eggs) What is “reduction division?” -Cell division that.

Why is only 1 egg produced in oogenesis?

When cytokinesis occurs, the cytoplasm is divided unevenly. Only the cell that gets the most cytoplasm forms an egg. The other 3 cells are called polar bodies and they do not participate in reproduction.

What is this

phase? Prophase I

What is this

phase? Metaphase I

Page 13: Meiosis occurs in what type of cells? Reproductive cells (the ones that divide to form sperm and eggs) What is “reduction division?” -Cell division that.

What is this

phase? Anaphase I

What is this phase? Telophase I

What is this phase? Prophase II

Page 14: Meiosis occurs in what type of cells? Reproductive cells (the ones that divide to form sperm and eggs) What is “reduction division?” -Cell division that.

What is this phase? Metaphase II

What is this phase? Anaphase II

What is this phase? Telophase II