Genetics: From Genes to Genomes
Genetics: From Genes to Genomes
6th Edition
ISBN: 9781259700903
Author: Leland Hartwell Dr., Michael L. Goldberg Professor Dr., Janice Fischer, Leroy Hood Dr.
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
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Chapter 12, Problem 31P

In the 1920s, Barbara McClintock, later a Nobel laureate for her discovery of transposable elements, examined the behavior of chromosomes in wheat cells that had been subjected to X-rays. She noticed that the X-rays produced chromosomal breaks during G1 phase, and that after subsequent chromosome replication in S phase, the broken ends of the two sister chromatids could join together to make a fusion chromosome larger than the original. Even later, during mitotic metaphase and early in mitotic anaphase, the joined sister chromatids would form an unusual bridge structure in which chromatin was stretched between the two spindle poles and could then eventually break. She called this phenomenon the breakage-fusion-bridge cycle. Each of photographs (a) and (b) that follow shows a cell in early mitotic anaphase that has two such chromatin bridges.

 Chapter 12, Problem 31P, In the 1920s, Barbara McClintock, later a Nobel laureate for her discovery of transposable elements, , example  1

a. What ensures that the ends of normal chromosomes do not fuse together as do the ends of the sister chromatids after breakage?
b. The following figure shows a chromosome with genes A–G; the arrow indicates the location of X-ray
induced breakage. Draw the resulting bridge (that is, the large fused chromosome) as it would be seen in mitotic anaphase, and label all the genes and important chromosomal structures the bridge contains. Use arrows to show the forces exerted by the spindle apparatus on this bridge.
 Chapter 12, Problem 31P, In the 1920s, Barbara McClintock, later a Nobel laureate for her discovery of transposable elements, , example  2
c. If the sister chromatids fuse, why must the fusion chromosome behave as a bridge during mitosis? [Think about the forces pulling on the bridge described in your answer to part (b).]
d. What is likely to happen to the bridge during mitotic anaphase? What then is likely to happen in the two daughter cells produced by the mitosis just described, and why? (Hint: McClintock’s name for this phenomenon implies it is a cycle.)
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Students have asked these similar questions
If a gamete of an unknown animal species has 18 chromosomes, how many chromatids are at anaphase I?  If a gamete of an unknown animal species has 18 chromosomes, how many chromatids are at telophase II? If a gamete of an unknown animal species has 18 chromosomes, how many centromeres after prophase II?  If a gamete of an unknown animal species has 18 chromosomes, how many chromosomes are in after anaphase II?  If a gamete of an unknown animal species has 18 chromosomes, how many chromosomes are in at metaphase I?    PLEASE ANSWER ALL OF THEM THEY ARE ALL CONNECTED, THANK YOU!
What are sister chromatids? What is the process that forms two sister chromatids from a single chromosome? Explain how this process works.
What structures are found in a chromosome? Group of answer choices Two structures for the mitotic spindle to bind, and two complex repetitive structures that are maintained by telomerase One structure for the mitotic spindle to bind, and two complex repetitive structures that are maintained by telomerase One structure for the mitotic spindle to bind, and one complex repetitive structure that is maintained by telomerase Two structures for the mitotic spindle to bind, and one complex repetitive structure that is maintained by telomerase.

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Genetics: From Genes to Genomes

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