ND STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY LOOSELEAF GENETICS: FROM GENES TO GENOMES
6th Edition
ISBN: 9781260406092
Author: HARTWELL, Leland, HOOD, Leroy, Goldberg, Michael
Publisher: Mcgraw-hill Education/stony Brook University
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Textbook Question
Chapter 4, Problem 19P
Can you think of anything that would prevent meiosis from occurring in an organism whose genome is always haploid?
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Can you think of anything that would prevent mitosis from occurring in a new cell whose genome is haploid?
Meiosis is also known as reduction cell division because it reduces the ploidy level from diploid (2n) to haploid (n). Why do we need to reduce our ploidy level in certain cells?
Mitosis produces 2 daughter cells that are identical to the starting cell. Explain how meíosis is different using
this diagram to help you.
1) How many cells are created through meiosis?
2) Describe the chromosomes in each gamete at the end of meiosis? Are the set of chromosomes in a gamete
identical to the starting cell like they are in mitosis? Are there the same number of chromosomes in each
gamete as the starting cell?
Starting cell's chromosomes:
1А, 1B, 2A, 2B
Interphase
After the S phase of interphase:
4 pairs of sister chromatids
1A 1A 1B 1B
2A 2A 2B 2B
Meiosis has 2 rounds of cell division
1A,
1A,
1B,
1B,
2A
2B
2A
2B
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Chapter 4 Solutions
ND STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY LOOSELEAF GENETICS: FROM GENES TO GENOMES
Ch. 4 - Choose the best matching phrase in the right...Ch. 4 - Humans have 46 chromosomes in each somatic cell....Ch. 4 - The figure that follows shows the metaphase...Ch. 4 - Human XX males who are sex-reversed because they...Ch. 4 - Researchers discovered recently that the sole...Ch. 4 - One oak tree cell with 14 chromosomes undergoes...Ch. 4 - Indicate which of the cells numbered iv matches...Ch. 4 - a. What are the four major stages of the cell...Ch. 4 - Answer the questions that follow for each stage of...Ch. 4 - Can you think of anything that would prevent...
Ch. 4 - One oak tree cell with 14 chromosomes undergoes...Ch. 4 - Which types of cell division mitosis, meiosis I,...Ch. 4 - Complete the following statements using as many of...Ch. 4 - The five cells shown in figure a e are all from...Ch. 4 - One of the first microscopic observations of...Ch. 4 - A person is simultaneously heterozygous for two...Ch. 4 - Assuming i that the two chromosomes in every...Ch. 4 - In the moss Polytrichum commune, the haploid...Ch. 4 - Can you think of anything that would prevent...Ch. 4 - Sister chromatids are held together through...Ch. 4 - The pseudoautosomal regions PARs of the X and Y...Ch. 4 - Remarkably, the platypus has 10 sex chromosomes,...Ch. 4 - Somatic cells of chimpanzees contain 48...Ch. 4 - In humans: a. How many sperm develop from 100...Ch. 4 - Women sometimes develop benign tumors called...Ch. 4 - In a certain strain of turkeys, unfertilized eggs...Ch. 4 - Imagine you have two pure-breeding lines of...Ch. 4 - A system of sex determination known as...Ch. 4 - In Drosophila, the autosomal recessive brown eye...Ch. 4 - Barred feather pattern is a Z-linked dominant...Ch. 4 - When Calvin Bridges observed a large number of...Ch. 4 - In a vial of Drosophila, a research student...Ch. 4 - In 1919, Calvin Bridges began studying an X-linked...Ch. 4 - In Drosophila, a cross was made between a...Ch. 4 - As we learned in this chapter, the white mutation...Ch. 4 - The following is a pedigree of a family in which a...Ch. 4 - Each of the four pedigrees that follow represents...Ch. 4 - The pedigree that follows indicates the occurrence...Ch. 4 - Duchenne muscular dystrophy DMD is caused by a...Ch. 4 - The X-linked gene responsible for DMD encodes a...Ch. 4 - Males have hemophilia when they are hemizygous for...Ch. 4 - In the Fast Forward Box Visualizing X Chromosome...Ch. 4 - Consider the following pedigrees from human...Ch. 4 - Several different antigens can be detected in...Ch. 4 - The ancestry of a white female tiger bred in a...Ch. 4 - The pedigree that follows shows the inheritance of...Ch. 4 - In 1995, doctors reported a Chinese family in...Ch. 4 - In cats, the dominant O allele of the X-linked...Ch. 4 - In marsupials like the opposum or kangaroo, X...Ch. 4 - The pedigree diagram below shows a family in which...
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- In the following diagram, designate each daughter cell as diploid (2n) or haploid (n).arrow_forwardWhat is the purpose of meiosis? In other words, why create haploid cells?arrow_forwardThe diagram below shows a cell during Meiosis II: a) What phase of Meiosis II is the cell in? How do you know? b) Assuming all of the chromosomes present during Meiosis II are shown in the figure above, how many chromosomes (counting homologous pairs as two chromosomes) does a gamete from this organism have? c) Draw the same cell during the same phase of Meiosis I. Label the elementsarrow_forward
- A cell that has a diploid number of 24 goes through meiosis. How many chromosomes would be in each cell after Meiosis II is completed. Would these cells be haploid or diploid? How many cells would be expected at the end of Meiosis II. Explain.arrow_forwardWhat is meant by incomplete linkage? What does this have to do with pairing of chromosomes during meiosis?arrow_forwardAn important function of meiosis is to reduce the chromosome number to exactly half.How is this done? What makes such a process necessary?arrow_forward
- If an organism has a total diploid chromosome number of 18, how many chromosomes will be in a single gamete? 54 9. 18 36arrow_forwardIf you have 16 chromatids inside the cell before meiosis, how many chromosomes will be present in each daughter cell after meiosis?arrow_forwardIf an organism has 15 pairs of homologous chromosomes, how many chromosomes will each daughter cell have after telophase of mitosis? In this same organism, how many chromosomes will each daughter cell have after telophase II of meiosis?arrow_forward
- Provide examples to support or refute this statement: The products of meiosis are always haploid cells, whereas the products of mitotic division are always diploid cells.arrow_forwardWhy do you think that organisms do not use the first steps of meiosis (up to and including meiotic cell division I) for the ordinary mitotic division of somatic cells?arrow_forwardAn individual is heterozygous for a reciprocal translocation, with the following chromosomes: A • B C D E F A • B C V W X R ST • U D E F R ST • U V W X Q. Draw a picture of these chromosomes pairing in prophase I of meiosis.arrow_forward
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