REPRODUCTION AND CONTINUITY OF LIFE
early embryonic development
- may occur externally or internally -when differentiation happens and cells divide by mitosis to form different specialized cells (different genes activated in different cells)
internal fertilization
- occurs in both aquatic and (mostly) terrestrial organisms -sperm and egg unite inside of the body of the female -greater success rate than external fertilization
internal development
-fertilized egg (zygots) develop inside of the body of the female -most often occurs with terrestrial organisms -developing offspring are provided with nutrition and protection by the mother -greater success rate of offspring than with external development
external fertilization
-occurs ONLY in aquatic organisms -both sperm and egg are released directly into the water -water provides an adequate environment for the survival of the sex cells -sperm joins with egg outside of the organism's body
external development
-zygotes develop outside of the body -most often occurs in water but may occur on land -amniotic egg-prevents drying out of developing embryo -developing offspring are vulnerable to predators and changing environmental conditions
result of meiosis I
2 HAPLOID daughter cells are created, either being paternal or maternal with chromosomes in the replicated form
identical chromosomes
2 copies make up a pair, one egg, one sperm,
result of meiosis II
4 HAPLOID daughter cells/gametes that are all GENETICALLY DIFFERENT
Tetrad
4 sister chromatids
prophase
Chromatin in the nucleus starts condensing and chromosomes become visible all chromosomes now have two chromatids that are joined together at the centromere the nuclear membrane dissolves
events of Interphase I
DNA replication forms replicated chromosomes
Diploid number and abbreviation
Diploid number= 46 abbreviation= 2N
telophase
End of nuclear division new nuclear membranes form around two daughter nuclei while chromosomes start dispersing cytokinesis begins
interphase
G1: growth and normal metabolic activities S: synthesis, when DNA is replicated G2: growth and preparation for mitosis majority of cell cycle is spent in interphase, happens before mitosis and meiosis
events of Metaphase I
Spindle fibers attach to the chromosomes as they line up in the middle of the cell and *Independent assortment occurs*
events of Anaphase I
Tetrads separate and move toward opposite ends of the cells
cytokinesis
The cytoplasm of the daughter cells is divided by a cell membrane and implant a cell wall in animal cells the daughter cells separate as the new cell membrane pinches in towards the middle of the cell in plant cells a new cell wall begins to form in the center of a cell between the two new daughter nuclei This is called the cell plate at the end of cytokinesis the daughter cells are separate and independent
anaphase
The sister chromatids separate and move to opposite ends of the cell
metaphase
The spindle fibers line the chromosomes up in the middle of the nucleus the organization that helps make sure that when chromosomes separate in anaphase the new nuclus will receive one copy of each chromosome
haploid
a cell with only one copy of each chromosome (have one copy of either the maternal or paternal chromosome, but not both)
diploid
a cell with two copies of each chromosome (one copy from mom and one copy from dad)
meiosis
a special type of cell division in which the number of chromosomes is reduced by half. produces gametes for sexual reproduction. there are two cell divisions that go from haploid to diploid. 4 cells are produced in total, and all are genetically unique and have variation. this variation is due to independent assortment and crossing over
4 bases in DNA
adenine, guanine, thymine, cytosine (a+t, c+g)
semi-conservative
after the DNA is replicated, the replicated chromosome has 2 strands of original DNA, and two of new DNA. a semi conservative model is a chromosome that has an original and new strand in one sister chromatid, and a new and original in the other. this is the structure of replicated chromosomes.
somatic cell
any body cell BESIDES a sex cell
forms of asexual reproduction
binary fission, budding, regeneration, vegetative propagation, sporulation
helicase
breaks the hydrogen bonds in DNA and separates the double helix
coiling and condensing of chromosomes
chromosomes condense before mitosis to allow them the ability to move smoothly, without becoming entangled and breaking
paternal chromosomes
comes from the father and makes up one of the pair in homologous chromosomes
maternal chromosomes
comes from the mother and makes up one of the pair in homologous chromosomes
placenta
connection between embryo and mother. delivers nutrients and oxygen and removes metabolic wastes. the blood from the mother and baby never mix, they are separated by the chorion, but drugs, alcohol, viruses and bacteria can cross the membrane. the placenta is the embryos organ of respiration, nutrition, and excretion
penis
connects the urethra to the outside of the body
set
copy of chromosomes 1-23. it is half of the chromosomes in the cell
replication in eukaryotes vs prokaryotes
euk- nucleus prok- cytoplasm
egg/ovum
female sex cell/gamete that consists of 23 chromosomes
Gametogenesis
formation of the gametes/egg and sperm
different words for the products of meiosis
gametes sex cells egg/ovum sperm
haploid number and abbreviation
haploid number= 23 abbreviation= N
crossing over
happens during prophase I when homologous chromosomes exchanges portions of their chromatids. AN IMPORTANT SOURCE OF GENETIC VARIATION
moms blood
has oxygen, vitamins, glucose, amino acids
stem cells
have the potential to grow into any type of cell. this is what the planaria have, thats why they can regrow
risks to an embryo
inadequate diet, substance use, toxins, infections, inherited disease
sperm
male sex cell/gamete that consists of 23 chromosomes
events of Prophase I
maternal and paternal homologous chromosomes find each other and form a tetrad. *Crossing over occurs*
ovulation
mature ovum is released from the ovary. follicle ruptures and releases its ovum. ovum is swept in the fallopian tube and pushed along by cilia lining the fallopian tubes. when ovum in in the tubes, it can be fertilized
rule of complementary bases
means that adenine always bonds with thymine and cytosine always bonds with guanine. when the two strands are compared side by side, the pairings will always be there, a across from t and c across from g
genetic recombination
new combinations of existing genes on each chromosome as a result of crossing over
events of Telophase I
nucleus divides and cytokinesis separates the two daughter cells
events of Telophase II
nucleus separates and cytokinesis splits the cytoplasm and distributes organelles
sexual reproduction
offspring receives half of its information from mom and half from dad. offspring will not be identical to parents.
gametogenesis of the egg
results in the formation of 1 large haploid egg cell and three smaller cells called polar bodies that are not involved in reproduction... only ONE egg develops per month
gametogenesis of the sperm
results in the formation of 4 equal-sized haploid sperm cells
cell cycle
sequence of events from the point when a new cell is created until it divides into 2 daughter cells interphase and the mitotic phase (division of the nucleus) and mitosis is followed cytokinesis
sister chromatids and centromere
sister chromatids are two strands of DNA. the centromere is the part of the chromosome where the sister chromatids are held together.
sporulation
spore formation, reproduction involving specialized single cells coming from one parent
structures of the male reproductive system
testes epididymis vas deferens urethra penis
implantation of blastocyst
the blastocyst attaches to the uterine lining, and the blastocyst has undifferentiated cells (stem cells)
homologous chromosomes
the cell has two sets of each chromosome. one of the pairs is derived from the mother and the other from the father. the maternal and paternal chromosomes in a homologous pair have the same genes at the same loci, but possibly different alleles. the chromosomes correspond maternal to paternal
independent assortment
the different ways in which a tetrad RANDOMLY lines up along the metaphase plate in relation to other tetrads which leads to many possible combinations of genes in the gametes
mitosis
the division of the nucleus of eukaryotic cells leading to the formation of two daughter nuclei each with identical chromosomes to that of the original nucleus. it is one cell division that goes from haploid to diploid. mitosis is making identical body cells. two cells are produced and there is no variation. the two daughter cells are identical to each other and the original cell. the cells divide for growth, development, repairing, restoring.
binary fission
the division of unicellular organisms into two equally sized daughter cells. the parent cell doesn't exist after the division. parent=daughter cell=daughter cell
DNA polymerase
the enzyme that builds DNA
events of Prophase II
the homologous chromosomes are no longer in the same cell and begin to move toward the middle of the cell
regeneration
the regrowth of an entire organism from a small part of the organism. the organisms grow back a missing part. this is what we did with the planaria
events of Metaphase II
the replicated chromosomes line up and attach to the spindle fiber
events of Anaphase II
the sister chromatids separate and move toward opposite ends of the cell
chromosome
tightly coiled condensed DNA wrapped around histones
vas deferens
tube from the scrotum to the body merges with the urethra
replicated/double stranded chromosome
two sister chromatids(two strands of DNA) attached at the centromere, each chromatid will go into one daughter cell. chromosomes are tightly coiled, there is 6 feet of DNA in 1 nucleus.
cleavage
type of mitotic rapid cell division that change a zygote into a morula, which is the solid ball that turns into a blastula
mitosis and meiosis similarities
types of cell division, S phase replication before division, cells need own genetic material
single stranded chromosome
unreplicated, only existent when in G1 of interphase. this is when the chromosome is not visible
replication: what, where, when and why
what: DNA being copied accurately where: in nucleus or cytoplasm depending on if it is eukaryotic or prokaryotic when: S phase of interphase why: so that each daughter cell following cell division will have their own copy of DNA
budding
when a complete new organism grows from the body of the parent organism and detaches from it. one is much larger than the other
vegetative propagation
when an entire new plant grows from the roots, stems, or leaves of the parent plant.
mutation
when an error happens in a cell destined to become an egg or sperm cell. mutations occur when DNA is copied incorrectly. as a result of a mutation, the sequence of bases is different, the genetic code is different and the gene cannot direct the cell to produce correctly.
nondisjunction
when chromosomes fail to separate, resulting in chromosomal disorders like down syndrome
fertilization
when the gametes unite to form a zygote which contains the complete genetic information for the offspring
DNA replication
when the original DNA molecule is copied, first the DNA must be separated. the double helix is unwinded by the enzyme helicase. the DNA molecule is now in two strands or unzipped. once unzipped, all of the bases are accessible and the information is exposed. the second step is the rebuilding of new strands by the enzyme DNA polymerase. new bases come in along with new sugar and phosphate subunits. the result is two identical DNA molecules. this all happens during interphase, more specifically in S phase (synthesis phase) in the nucleus
testes
where sperm are produced
epididymis
where sperm finish maturing and are stored
advantages and disadvantages of asexual reproduction
you don't need to find a mate, and it is a very fast process, but the parent is identical to the offspring, so there is no variation, which makes the species more prone to extinction