Biology Ch. 9-11 (Feely)
prometaphase
Nuclear envelope fragments into vesicles (gone), Mitotic spindle is completely formed, *Microtubules find kinetochores & attach to them*, Microtubules begin to direct chromosomes toward equatorial plane (midplane)
asexual reproduction
ONE parent produces offspring by dividing in two or producing egg that develops unfertilized into a CLONE, *Offspring are identical to parent* ex: Binary fission in bacteria/Mitosis in single-celled eukaryotes
homologue
One member of a homologous pair of chromosomes
interphase
PREPARATION for cell division: g1- first gap, most variable stage (could be absent or last days), cell *doubles in size,* performs normal metabolic func. s- *synthesis,* DNA REPLICATION, all 46 chromosomes duplicated, DNA still in CHROMATIN form g2- 2nd gap, final prep bf mitosis, continues to grow & make proteins in prep for dividing
anaphase 2
Sister chromatids are pulled apart to opposite ends of cell (Now each chromatid is called a chromosome)
interkinesis
RESTING period of time between meiosis I and meiosis II during which *no DNA replication takes place*
DNA
(deoxyribonucleic acid) - nucleic acid that contains the genetic material of living organisms, Instructions for growth/function/response to stimuli, Passed on at level of cell (mitosis) and organism (meiosis), stretched out it would be 6 ft long
binary fission
*PROKARYOTIC cell division* ASEXUAL, New CIRCULAR DNA molecule copied from old, Daughter DNA molecules separate to opposite ends of cell, Cell begins to split down middle, Cell completes split into 2 cells each with identical DNA
genotype
*genetic makeup* of an individual, combination of alleles that code for a specific trait, Represent the allele combinations that result after gametes combine through reproduction, *code for phenotypes*
phenotype
*physical appearance* of organism (ex: brown fur/purple flowers), genes interact w/ environment to shape this, env conditions can cause genes to get turned off/on to display diff ones
punnett square
1. Identify the possible gametes each parent could produce(each gamete can only contain one allele for each trait) 2. Put the alleles (gametes) of one parent to the left of the square & the alleles of the other parent at the top 3. To determine the potential offspring, combine the alleles from each side and place the genotype in the corresponding box.
telophase
2 daughter nuclei form, Daughter chromosomes arrive at poles & *decondense back to chromatin*, Mitotic spindle degrades, Cytokinesis finishes up
diploid
2 sets of chromosomes, pairs of alleles on *homologous chromosomes* (2 possible variants)
tetrad
4 chromatids with 2 centromeres
humans
46 chromosomes, 23 (homologous) pairs
character
A heritable feature that varies among individuals (ex: eye color)
centrosome
A structure in animal cells containing centrioles (ANIMAL CELL) from which the spindle fibers develop.
cytokinesis 2
After meiosis of one diploid cell, the finished produce is *4 haploid cells (1/2 the number of chromosomes as original cell)* Males - 4 male gametes (sex cells) Female - 1 female gamete & 3 polar bodies
centromere
Area where the chromatids of a chromosome are attached
prophase
Chromatin completely condense into chromosomes NOW VISIBLE, Each chromosome is composed of identical sister chromatids joined at a centromere, right now a human cell would have 46 chromosomes composed of 92 chromatids, *nuclear envelope disassembles, animal cells: mitotic spindle forms from centrosomes w/centrioles at move toward poles of cell
telophase 1
Chromosomes (still composed of sister chromatids) reach the poles, Nuclear envelope begins to reform, Chromosomes begin to decondense, meiotic spindle disappears, Cytokinesis occurs- *NOW 2 HAPLOID CELLS*
prophase 1
Chromosomes condense, Nuclear envelope disappears, Spindle fibers form, *Homologous chromosomes pair up to form tetrads* CROSSING OVER occurs, microtubules from 1 pole attach to kinetochores of one homologue
prophase 2
Chromosomes condense, spindles form in each new cell, nuclear envelope begins to disappear again, no replication
metaphase
Chromosomes line up along midplane (to ensure genetic info split evenly) in a single file line (guided to middle by kinetochore microtubules), Polar microtubules overlap at midplane, Chromosomes are in the densest state!
metaphase 2
Chromosomes line up on metaphase plate in a single file line, NOT paired up with their homologue (alr split)
telophase 2
Chromosomes reach poles of cell, Chromosomes begin to decondense, Nuclear envelope begins to reform around each new nucleus *NOTE: Each new nucleus still has ½ the number of chromosomes as the original diploid cell (only one chromosome from each homologous pair)
homologous chromosomes
Chromosomes that have the carry genetic info of same sequence of genes and, one chromosome in pair maternal & other chromosome in pair paternal
meiosis
DIPLOID nucleus division in GERM cells (NOT somatic cells) to produce *4 genetically different nuclei,* Men - occurs in testes, Women - occurs in ovaries, produces HAPLOID egg/sperm cells (each w 1 set of chromosomes), interphase -> M1-> M2-> cytokinesis
nucleosome
DNA wrapped around 8 histone proteins
cytokinesis
Division of cytoplasm to form 2 daughter cells, Animal cell - formation of cleavage furrow, Plant cell - formation of cell plate
dominantly inherited disorders
Dominant alleles that cause a lethal disease are rare and often cause the death of affected individuals before they can mature and reproduce (ex: huntington's disease- degenerative disease of the nervous system caused by a lethal dominant allele with no obvious phenotype apparent until the individual is about 35-45 years old)
1st filial generation
F1, first generation of offspring
2nd filial generation
F2, second generation of offspring
Gregor Mendel
Father of genetics, bred pea plants, 3 decades after his death his research was found which set foundation for current genetic understanding
multifactorial disorders
Many diseases, such as heart disease, diabetes, cancer, alcoholism, and mental illnesses have both genetic and environmental components, Lifestyle has a tremendous effect on phenotype for cardiovascular health and other characters
anaphase 1
Microtubules separate the homologous chromosomes (tetrads separate)*NOTE: Sister CHROMATIDS of each chromosome are STILL ATTACHED at centromere, reduction division
metaphase 1
TETRADS (held together at chiasmata) line up along midplane, microtubules from other pole attach to kinetochores of the other homologue
monohybrid cross
a cross between two individuals that examines one character/trait (ex: flower color which= character)
dihybrid cross
a cross that examines TWO characters/traits at different loci, must find potential gametes
genome
all of the DNA in an organism Or all DNA in an organelle (ex: nDNA)
Interphase 1
all processes same as other, g1- normal metabolic func./doubles in size, s- dna replication, g2- finish cell growth & prep for division
allele
alternative form of a gene (ex: A= purple flowers, a= white flower)
dominant alleles
always expressed when present, Masks other alleles (capital letter)
cell divison
basis for continuity of life: Reproduction, Growth & repair, Production of sex cells, Cells come from preexisting cells
somatic cells
body cells (NOT reproductive), *mitosis*
karyotype
chromosome inventory, pictures captured by scientists during metaphase
genetic variation
created via meiosis: 1. crossing over (prophase 1), 2. random/independent assortment: in metaphase 1 orientation of tetrads RANDOM
test cross
determine the genotype of dominant phenotype by crossing with homozygous recessive
reduction division
diploid-> haploid
mitosis
division of a cell's DIPLOID *nucleus* to produce two new daughter nuclei that are genetically IDENTICAL to the original DIPLOID nucleus (PPMAT)
chromosome
dna packaged into linear molecules when READY FOR DIVISION, very tightly wound chromatin, scaffolding proteins help maintain structure, # varies among species (does not indicate complexity), moving form DNA is not accessible
recessive alleles
do not produce an effect when present with a dominant allele, Only expressed if NOT paired with a dominant allele (lowercase, must come in pair to be expressed, ex: rr)
crossing over
during PROPHASE 1 of MEIOSIS, homologous chromosomes exchange genetic information at chiasmata regions
reginald punnett
early professor of genetics, punnett square method to predict genotypes of offspring
fertilization
egg + sperm= diploid
zygote
fertilized egg, 1 set of chromosomes from each parent (diploid), produces somatic cells by mitosis & develops into adult
cell cycle control system
g1 checkpoint, g2 check point, m checkpoint
locus
gene location on a chromosome
sexual reproduction
genetic material from TWO parents is MIXED to produce *unique offspring,* Union of two sex cells (GAMETES) to form a single cell (zygote), Offspring are NOT genetically identical to parents, *Increases genetic variation*
heterozygous
having a pair of different alleles (Bb) expresses dominant phenotype
carriers
heterozygous individuals who carry the recessive allele but are phenotypically normal
chromatin
nucleosomes wound tightly together, mostly see DNA in this form, more accessible to read/build than chromosomes
ploidy
number of chromosomes in a cell (haploid 1 set/diploid 2 set homologous/triploid 3 sets)
multiple alleles
often *within a population* (NOT an individual) more than two alleles can exist for a single gene (ex: blood type- A/B/O)
epistasis
one gene masks the expression of another, so more than one gene affects a single phenotype, *BOTH RECESSIVE* (ex: aabb results in albino snake)
law of independent assortment
other principle of heredity developed by MENDEL: alleles for one gene segregate from one another independently of alleles for a different gene, Occurs during Metaphase I (diff genes line up differently which randomizes offspring, increasing genetic variation)
parental generation
p generation, initial cross of genetic study
homozygous
pair of IDENTICAL alleles (dom= BB, rec= bb), *true breeding*
law of segregation
principle of heredity developed by MENDEL: the two alleles for a gene separate when gametes are formed (homologous chromosomes) ex: meiosis 1, only 1 allele from each parent goes to offspring
phenotype ratio
ratio of dominant to recessive
genotypic ratio
ratio of homozygous dominant to heterozygous to homozygous recessive (HOD:HET:HOR)
gene
segment of DNA/unit of hereditary info that codes for a protein AND TRAIT, Provides information for cell function, about 20,000, inside of chromosomes, makes cell complex (not # of chromosomes), instructions to make proteins for diff functions
gametes
sex cells, haploid
recessively inherited disorders
show up only in individuals homozygous for the allele
anaphase
sister chromatids separate at centromere & are pulled by kinetochore microtubules to opposite poles of cell (now individual chromosomes), polar microtubules elongate which pushes poles further apart
centriole
structure in an *animal cell* that helps to organize cell division
genetic recombination
the exchange of genetic material between homologous chromosomes (pro 1), chromosomes now recombinants of parental types, happens in several places along each chromosome
genetics
the science of heredity, how genes vary
heredity
transmission of genetic information from parent to offspring
homozygous dominant
two dominant alleles (BB) expresses dominant phenotype
homozygous recessive
two recessive alleles (bb) expresses recessive phenotype
trait
variant for a character (ex: BROWN eyes)
incomplete dominance
when heterozygote has a phenotype that is intermediate between the 2 homozygotes (complete= classic inheritance), express MIXTURE of BOTH dom. & rec., result= new phenotype w/ blend of dom/rec (ex: red flower bred w white flower- offspring= red, white, & PINK)
polygenic inheritance
when multiple genes have an additive effect on one phenotype, Most of the really variable human phenotypes (height, weight, skin, hair, eyes), As many as 60 genes account for skin pigment!
pleiotropy
when one gene has multiple effects• Ex: cystic fibrosis - the recessive allele that codes for a defective chloride transmembrane protein (which causes multiple effects such as clogged blood vessels/liver & pancreas trouble/salty sweat, by only 1 gene)
codominance
when the heterozygote expressed both phenotypes at the same time equally (NOT an intermediate of the two) ex: brown and white spotted cow (both phenotypes DISTINGUISHABLE)