Hey Guys,
I have Biology Sac on Monday and I have no clue what's going on? Its on meiosis. And the we can present it in any way we can and the rubric says
An explanation of each phase during meiosis i.e. interphase, prophase, metaphase, anaphase, telophase and cytokinesis (I and II)
The inclusion and explanation of the cell cycle
Explanation of crossing over and independent assortment.
Any help appreciated?
Thanks
Meiosis has two major stages: Meiosis I and II
Meiosis I:
Interphase: DNA of the diploid germ-line cell replicates and as per normal of mitosis.
Prophase I: Nuclear membrane disintegrates, chromatin condenses into chromosomes and spindle fibres form as the centrioles move to opposite poles.
Metaphase I: The homologous chromosomes line up at the equatorial plate (mitotic plate) with the aid of the spindle fibres. The kinetochore spindle fibres attach to each kinetochore section on each chromosome.
Anaphase I: The homologous chromosomes are separated to opposite poles of the two daughter cells (not identical since chromosomes were homologous, one from mother and one from father)
Telophase I: The nuclear membrane starts to reform over the chromosomes and cytokinesis starts. Chromosomes turn into chromatin again.
Cytokinesis I: The two daughter cells pinch off. (Two haploid cells but they both have chromosomes with sister chromatids, hence they have 23 chromosomes, but 46 DNA molecules in the nucleus)
Meiosis II:
NO Interphase, hence no DNA replication!
Metaphase II: The chromosomes line up at the equatorial plate (mitotic plate) with the aid of the spindle fibres. The kinetochore spindle fibres attach to each kinetochore section on each chromosome.
Anaphase II: The chromatids are separated to opposite poles of the four daughter cells. Hence all chromosomes are now singular (non-sister chromatids)
Telophase II: The nuclear membrane starts to reform over the chromosomes and cytokinesis starts. Chromosomes turn into chromatin again.
Cytokinesis II: The four haploid gametes are formed (in females, only 1 survives this process).