Meiosis (AQA GCSE Biology)
Revision Note
Written by: Lára Marie McIvor
Reviewed by: Lucy Kirkham
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Meiosis
Cells in reproductive organs divide by meiosis to form gametes (sex cells)
The number of chromosomes must be halved when the gametes are formed
Otherwise, there would be double the number of chromosomes after they join at fertilisation in the zygote (fertilized egg)
This halving occurs during meiosis, and so it is described as a reduction division in which the chromosome number is halved from diploid to haploid, resulting in genetically different cells
It starts with chromosomes doubling themselves as in mitosis and lining up in the centre of the cell
After this has happened the cells divide twice so that only one copy of each chromosome passes to each gamete
We describe gametes as being haploid – having half the normal number of chromosomes
Because of this double division, meiosis produces four haploid cells
The process of cell division by meiosis to produce haploid gamete cells
Process
Each chromosome is duplicated (makes identical copies of itself), forming X-shaped chromosomes
First division: the chromosome pairs line up along the centre of the cell and are then pulled apart so that each new cell only has one copy of each chromosome
Second division: the chromosomes line up along the centre of the cell and the arms of the chromosomes are pulled apart
A total of four haploid daughter cells will be produced
Importance
Produces gametes eg. sperm cells and egg cells in animals, pollen grains and ovum cells in plants
Increases genetic variation of offspring
Meiosis produces variation by forming new combinations of maternal and paternal chromosomes every time a gamete is made, meaning that when gametes fuse randomly at fertilisation, each offspring will be different from any others
Fertilisation
Gametes join at fertilisation to restore the normal number of chromosomes
When the male and female gametes fuse, they become a zygote (fertilised egg cell)
This contains the full number of chromosomes, half of which came from the male gamete and half from the female gamete
The zygote divides by mitosis to form two new cells, which then continue to divide and after a few days form an embryo
Cell division continues and eventually many of the new cells produced become specialised (the cells differentiate) to perform particular functions and form all the body tissues of the offspring
The process of cells becoming specialised is known as cell differentiation
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