MITOSIS and MEIOSIS (Biology 1010)
chromosome - a large quantity of double-stranded DNA complexed with nucleoproteins,
which goes through a cycle of coiling (condensation); occurs in the nucleus;
carries the genes (hereditary information); genes are located at sites on the
chromosomes called loci and can occur in different versions called alleles,
which result from mutations, which are rare mistakes in DNA replication.
chromatin - condition of the chromosomes when they are uncoiled during Interphase.
structural gene - a portion of double-stranded DNA that carries instructions for
making a specific protein or polypeptide
regulatory gene - controls the expression of structural genes and/or the course of
development
centromere - constricted region on the chromosome; contains no genes, but functions
in movement of chromosomes during nuclear division (mitosis and meiosis); it is
the region that does not replicate during prophase, but later, at the beginning
of anaphase.
chromatid - one unreplicated chromosome
sister chromatids - identical copies of the DNA of a particular chromosome, joined
at their centromeres; created by DNA replication, separated from each other
during mitosis (or meiosis II).
homologs - two versions of a chromosome, which occur in non-gamete cells of
diploid organisms. A pair of homologous chromosomes will carry two copies of
each gene, which may or may not be identical copies. Different versions of these
genes are called alleles and code for proteins which are slightly different from
each other in primary structure. Homologues pair (synapse) with each other
during Prophase of Meiosis I and may exchange pieces of their DNA (non-sister
chromatids) before the "reduction division" resulting in haploid daughter cells.
If a variant allele is transferred to a non-sister chromatid of its homologue,
recombination is said to have occurred (a "new combination" of alleles on that
chromosome). The physical process that accomplishes this exchange during pairing
involves breakage and "misrepair" and is called crossing over. Homologues do
not pair during mitosis.
haploid - a nucleus contains only 1 version of each chromosome. N = 1 chromosome
complement. Gametes (sperm and egg) are haploid; many lower organisms consist
entirely of haploid cells.
diploid - a nucleus containing 2 versions of each chromosome (2 alleles of each
gene). 2N = 2 chromosome complements. Most higher organisms are entirely
diploid except for their gametes. Zygotes (fertilized eggs) are always diploid.
autosome - a chromosome that is not a sex chromosome
sex chromosome - in most higher organisms, one pair of chromosomes determine sex of
the individual (e.g. X and Y in mammals); usually, one sex (e.g. male mammals,
XY) is heterogametic, that is, its pair of sex chromosomes are not homologous and
do not pair in Meiosis; the homogametic sex (females in mammals) lacks the Y-
chromosome genes, but has 2 "doses" of the X-linked genes. Structural genes
carried on the sex chromosomes code for traits that are said to be sex-linked.
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