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AP Bio Chapter 13: Meiosis and Sexual Life Cycles Flashcards

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558109629hereditythe transmission of traits from one generation to the next
558109630variationoffspring differ somewhat in appearance from parents and siblings
558109631geneticsthe study of heredity and heredity variation
558109632genesparents endow their offspring with this coded information in the form of heredity units
558109633gametesthese reproductive cells are the vehicles that transmit genes from one generation to the next. unite and pass on during fertilization
558109634locusa gene's specific location along the length of a chromosome
558109635asexual reproductionproduce exact copies of themselves this way. a single individual is the sole parent and passes copies of all its genes to its offspring
558109636clonean individual that reproduces asexually creates a group of genetically identical individuals
558109637sexual reproductiontwo parents give rise to offspring that have unique combinations of genes inherited from the two parents. variations on a common theme of family inheritance
558109638karyotypethe picture of chromosomes arranged in pairs, starting with the longest chromosomes
558109639homologous chromosomesthe two chromosomes composing a pair that have the same length, centromere position, and staining pattern
558109640sex chromosomesX and Y, determine the sex
558109641autosomesnon sex chromosomes
558109642diploid cellcells with two chromosome sets, in humans the total is 46
558109643haploid cellcell with one chromosome set, in humans 23
558109644fertilizationthe union of gametes, the egg and sperm
558109645zygotethe resulting fertilized egg
558109646animal life cyclegametes are only haploid cells. meiosis occurs during the production of gametes, which undergo no further cell division prior to fertilization. the diploid zygote divides by mitosis producing a mulitcellular organism that is diploid
558109647alternation of generationsexhibited by plants and some species of algae. includes both diploid and haploid multicellular stages. multicellular diploid stage is the sporophyte. meiosis in the sporophyte produces the haploid spores which gives rise to a haploid gametophyte
558109648sporophytethe multicellular diploid stage of the alternation of generations. goes through meiosis to produce spores
558109649sporeshaploid cells that give rise to mulitcellular individual without fusing with another cell. divides mitotically to generate a multicellular haploid stage called gametophyte
558109650gametophytehaploid, comes from spores, makes gametes by mitosis. fertilization here results in the zygote
558109651fungi and protist life cyclegametes fuse and form a diploid zygote, meiosis occurs without a diploid offspring developing. meiosis produces not gametes but haploid cells that then divide by mitosis and give rise to a haploid multicellular adult. the haploid adult carries out mitosis producing cells that develop into gametes.
558109652meiosis Ifirst consecutive cell division
558109653meiosis IIsecond consecutive cell division
558109654interphase-chromosomes duplicate during S phase but remain uncondensed. -each replicated chromosome consists of two genetically identical sister chromatids connected at the centromere. -the centrosome replicates, forming two centromeres
558109655prophase I-90 percent of the time for meiosis. -chromosomes begin to condense. -homologous chromosomes loosely pair along their lengths, precicely aligned gene by gene. -in crossing over. the DNA molecules in nonsi
558109656prophase I-in crossing over the DNA molecules in nonsister chromatids break at corresponding places and then rejoin to the other's DNA
558109657prophase I-in synapsis, a protein structure called thje synaptonemal complex forms between homologues, holding them together tightly along their lengths
558109658prophase I-the synaptonemal complex disassembles in the late part of this stage, and each chromosome pair becomes visible in the microscope of as a tetrad, a group of four chromatids.
558109659prophase I-each tetrad has one or more chiasmata holding the homologues together until anaphase I
558109660chiasmatacriss crossed regions where crossing over has occured.
558109661prophase I-the movement of centrosomes, formation of spindle microtubules, breakdown of the nuclear envelope, and dispersal of nucleoli occur as in mitosis
558109662prophase I-late in this stage the kinetochores of each homologue attach to microtubules from one pole or the other. the homologous pairs then move toward the metaphase plate.
558109663metaphase I-the pairs of homologous chromosomes, in the form of tetrads, are now arranged on the metaphase plate, with one chromosome of each pair facing each pole, with one chromosome of each pair facing each pole
558109664metaphase I-both chromatids of a homologue are attached to kinetochore microtubules from one pole; those of the other homologoue are attached to microtubules of the other pole
558109665anaphase I-the chromosomes move toward the poles, guided by the spindle apparatus
558109666anaphase I-sister chromatids remain attached at the centromere and move as a single unit toward the same pole
558109667anaphase I-homologous chromosomes, each composed of two sister chromatids, move toward opposite poles.
558109668telophase I-at the beginning of this stage, each half of the cell has a complete haploid set of chromosomes, but each chromosome is still composed of two sister chromatids
558109669cytokinesis-this forms in conjunction with telophase I, forming two haploid daughter cells
558109670cytokinesis-in animal cells a cleavage furrow forms, in plant cells, a cell wall
558109671cytokinesisin some species the chromosomes decondense, and the nuclear envelope reforms
558109672prophase II-a spindle apparatus forms
558109673prophase II-late in this phase, chromosomes each still composed of 2 chromatids, move toward the metaphase II plate
558109674metaphase II-the chromosomes are positioned on the metaphase plate as in mitosis
558109675metaphase II-because of crossing over in meiosis I, the two sister chromatids of each chromosome are not genetically identical
558109676metaphase II-the kinetochores of sister chromatids are attached to microtubules extending from opposite poles
558109677anaphase II-the centromeres of each chromosome finally separate, and the sister chromatids fall apart
558109678anaphase IIthe sister chromatids of each chromosome now move as two individual chromosomes toward opposite poles
558109679telophase II-nuclei form, the chromosomes begin decondensing, and cytokinesis begins
558109680cytokinesis-the meiotic division of one parent cell produces four daughters, each with a haploid set of chromosomes
558109681cytokinesis-each of the 4 daughter cells is genetically distinct from the other daughter cells and from the parent cell
558109682synapsisduplicated homologous chromosomes line up and become physically connected along their lengths by a zipperlike protein structure
558109683crossing overgenetic rearrangement between nonsister chromatids, swap parts
558109684tetradthe four chromatids of a homologous pair are visible in the light microscope as this. FOUR
558109685recombiant chromosomesproduced by crossing over, individual chromosomes that carry genes derived from two different parents

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