Chiasmata: Difference between revisions

From The School of Biomedical Sciences Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
150015994 (talk | contribs)
Created page with " Chiasmata is the region of crossing over between two homologous chromosomes during Propase I of meiosis. At the chiasmata, homologous chromosomes exchange genes. This allow..."
 
Nnjm2 (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
 
(5 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 Chiasmata is the region of crossing over between two homologous chromosomes during Propase I of meiosis. At the chiasmata, homologous chromosomes exchange genes. This allows genetic information from both the paternal and maternal chromatids to be exchanged, and a recombination of paternal and maternal genes can be passed down to the progeny. This process is important in diploid organisms to ensure variation in the progeny. 
Chiasmata is the region of crossing over between two homologous chromosomes during [[Prophase I|Prophase I]] of [[Meiosis|meiosis]]. At the chiasmata, [[Homologous chromosomes|homologous chromosomes]] exchange [[Genes|genes]], allowing genetic information from both the paternal and maternal chromatids to be exchanged, and a recombination of paternal and maternal genes can be passed down to the progeny. This process is important in diploid organisms to ensure variation in the progeny<ref>Hartl, D.L. Ruvolo, M., 2012. Genetics: Analysis of Genes and Genomes. 8th ed. Jones Bartlett Learning.</ref>.  
 
=== Reference  ===
 
<references />

Latest revision as of 08:47, 16 November 2018

Chiasmata is the region of crossing over between two homologous chromosomes during Prophase I of meiosis. At the chiasmata, homologous chromosomes exchange genes, allowing genetic information from both the paternal and maternal chromatids to be exchanged, and a recombination of paternal and maternal genes can be passed down to the progeny. This process is important in diploid organisms to ensure variation in the progeny[1].

Reference

  1. Hartl, D.L. Ruvolo, M., 2012. Genetics: Analysis of Genes and Genomes. 8th ed. Jones Bartlett Learning.