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Meiosis & Genetic Variation

Meiosis takes a diploid (2n) cell through one round of DNA replication and two divisions, producing four genetically unique haploid (n) gametes. Variation arises from crossing over, independent assortment, and random fertilization.

Meiosis I — reductional (separates homologs)

  • Prophase I: chromosomes condense; homologs pair (synapsis) forming tetrads (bivalents); crossing over occurs at chiasmata. Major source of genetic variation.
  • Metaphase I: tetrads line up at the metaphase plate; independent assortment of homologous pairs — each pair orients independently → 2ⁿ combinations of maternal/paternal chromosomes (2²³ ≈ 8.4 million in humans, before crossing over).
  • Anaphase I: homologous chromosomes separate; sister chromatids stay together.
  • Telophase I / Cytokinesis: two haploid cells, each chromosome still as sister chromatid pair.

Meiosis II — equational (separates sister chromatids)

  • Resembles mitosis. No DNA replication occurs between Meiosis I and II.
  • Sister chromatids separate at anaphase II.
  • Result: 4 haploid cells, each genetically distinct.

Mitosis vs. Meiosis (high-yield comparison)

FeatureMitosisMeiosis
Divisions12
Daughter cells24
Ploidy2n → 2n2n → n
Synapsis / crossing overNoYes (Prophase I)
Genetic identityIdentical to parentGenetically unique
PurposeGrowth, repair, asexual reproductionGamete formation

Sources of genetic variation

  1. Crossing over (Prophase I) — exchanges segments between homologs at chiasmata.
  2. Independent assortment (Metaphase I) — random orientation of tetrads.
  3. Random fertilization — any sperm × any egg.
  4. Mutation — the ultimate source of new alleles. The other three only shuffle existing variation.

Linked vs. unlinked genes

  • Unlinked (different chromosomes): independent assortment — predicted dihybrid 9:3:3:1.
  • Linked (same chromosome): tend to inherit together; recombination only occurs via crossing over. Recombination frequency (RF) ≤ 50%; 1% RF ≈ 1 map unit (centimorgan). Closer genes → fewer recombinants.

Nondisjunction

  • Failure of chromosomes (Meiosis I) or sister chromatids (Meiosis II) to separate.
  • Results in aneuploidy: one gamete has n+1 chromosomes, another has n−1.
  • Examples in humans: Trisomy 21 (Down syndrome), XXY (Klinefelter), XO (Turner), XXX, XYY.

Example questions

MCQ During which phase do tetrads form and crossing over occur? (A) Prophase I (B) Metaphase I (C) Prophase II (D) Anaphase II

Answer: A. Synapsis pairs homologs into tetrads (bivalents) during Prophase I; crossing over occurs at the chiasmata that form between non-sister chromatids of homologous chromosomes.

FRQ Explain how meiosis generates genetic variation, and describe how this variation contributes to evolution by natural selection.

Answer: Meiosis generates variation through (1) crossing over in Prophase I, which recombines alleles between homologs; (2) independent assortment in Metaphase I, in which each homologous pair orients randomly, producing 2ⁿ combinations of maternal/paternal chromosomes; and (3) random fertilization, which combines two genetically unique gametes. This raw variation supplies the heritable phenotypic differences on which natural selection acts: individuals whose variants confer higher fitness reproduce more, gradually changing allele frequencies in the population over generations.

MCQ Two genes are 18 map units apart. From a test cross, what percent recombinant offspring are expected? (A) 9% (B) 18% (C) 36% (D) 50%

Answer: B. A map unit (centimorgan) is defined as 1% recombination, so genes 18 map units apart yield 18% recombinant offspring in a test cross.

Drill flashcards

meiosis Homologous chromosomes Tap / Space to flip
meiosis Pair carrying the same genes (one from each parent); same length, centromere position, and gene loci.
meiosis Sister chromatids Tap / Space to flip
meiosis Identical copies of a chromosome joined at the centromere after S-phase replication.
meiosis Tetrad / bivalent Tap / Space to flip
meiosis Paired homologs (4 chromatids total) formed during synapsis in Prophase I.
meiosis Synapsis Tap / Space to flip
meiosis Pairing of homologous chromosomes in Prophase I; required for crossing over.
meiosis Crossing over Tap / Space to flip
meiosis Reciprocal exchange of DNA segments between non-sister chromatids of homologs (Prophase I, at chiasmata).
meiosis Chiasma Tap / Space to flip
meiosis Visible site where crossing over has occurred between non-sister chromatids.
meiosis Independent assortment Tap / Space to flip
meiosis Random orientation of each homologous pair at Metaphase I → 2ⁿ combinations of chromosomes (2²³ in humans).
meiosis Nondisjunction Tap / Space to flip
meiosis Failure of homologs (Meiosis I) or sister chromatids (Meiosis II) to separate properly. Produces aneuploid gametes.
meiosis Aneuploidy Tap / Space to flip
meiosis Abnormal chromosome number from nondisjunction (e.g., trisomy 21 → Down syndrome).
meiosis Reductional vs. equational Tap / Space to flip
meiosis Meiosis I halves the chromosome number (reductional). Meiosis II separates sister chromatids (equational, like mitosis).

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