5.4.1 Genetic Variation Flashcards

1
Q

Gametogenesis

A

The production or origin of gametes - a form of meiosis

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2
Q

Germline cells

A

All cells used in reproduction in multicellular organisms

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3
Q

Ploidy

A

The number of sets of chromosomes in a cell, denoted n.

  • Haploid: n
  • Diploid: 2n
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4
Q

Chromosomal crossover

A

During prophase I, chromosomes pair up with their homologous pair

  • Homologous pair in diploid cells: chromosomes that are similar in length, gene position, and centromere location
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5
Q

Meiosis and genetic variation

A
  • Gametes may be genetically distinct if crossing over occurs in prophase I, causing the recombination of sister chromatids
  • Crossing over provides variety to a population. This is vital to the adaptation and survival of species, as explained in Darwin’s Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection
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6
Q

Spermatogenesis and oogenesis

as types of gametogenesis

A
  • A type of gametogenesis
  • To become a sperm or ovum, a gametocyte (diploid germ cell) is influenced by the hormones of the body it is in, which is controlled by the organism’s sex chromosomes
  • Gametogenesis will specialise as spermatogenesis or oogenesis accordingly
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7
Q

Spermatogenesis

process

A

Specialisation process at the end of meiosis (e.g. swimming mechanisms)

  • 4 sister sperm cells are formed in the testes of males
  • This process can occur from before birth until death
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8
Q

Oogenesis

process

A

Longer and more complex than spermatogenesis - rather, a form of meiosis

  • Oogenesis forms a mature oocyte and 3 polar bodies (sterile gametes that degenerate). This whole process spans birth, puberty and fertilisation in which through Meiosis I and II, majority of the cytoplasm of the parent cell goes into a single gamete, which will become the mature ovum.
    1. Before birth: oogonium (germ cell) undergoes mitosis to produce primary oocytes which are arrested in prophase I. Therefore, females have a set number of ova for their lives
    2. Puberty: Follicular cycle - maturation of a follicle results in one primary oocyte completes meiosis I → secondary oocyte (arrested in Metaphase II) and first polar body
    3. Fertilisation: secondary oocyte released into fallopian tube. If it is fertilised by a sperm cell it completes meiosis II → zygote (2n) and second polar body + two polar bodies from the first polar body.
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9
Q

Non-disjunction

A

Nondisjunction results in an aneuploid zygote (one cell with n+1 or n-1)

Mutations: the spindle fibres separate homologous pairs. However sometimes the homologous pairs or chomatids don’’t separate. This can occur at anaphase I (homologous chromosomes fail to separate) or anaphase II (sister chromatids fail to separate)

Aneuploid: cell has abnormal number of chromosomes

This can result in chromosomal disorders

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