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Gametes and Inheritance

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visibility 290update 10 months agobookmarkshare

In this topic you will:

  • learn what a gamete is
  • think about the similarities and differences between male and female gametes
  • find out what happens at fertilisation
  • explain what determines whether a baby is a boy or a girl
 

Key words

  • egg cell
  • fertilisation
  • gametes
  • inheritance
  • sex chromosomes
  • sex inheritance
  • sperm cell
  • X chromosomes
  • Y chromosomes
  • zygote
 

Gametes

Most cells in a human body contain 46 chromosomes. Where did these chromosomes come from? To answer that, try to think about how a new human life begins.

Every human being began life as a single cell. This cell was formed when a sperm cell joined with an egg cell. Sperm cells and egg cells are specialised cells known as gametes. A sperm cell is a male gamete, and an egg cell is a female gamete.

This diagram shows a human sperm cell. The photograph shows a group of sperm cells. It was taken with a special kind of powerful microscope called a scanning electron microscope.

Diagram of human sperm cell

Labelled diagram of a sperm cell with tail, nucleus (23 chromosomes), and small amount of cytoplasm
 

Electron microscope image of sperm cells

Electron microscope image of multiple sperm cells

Sperm cells are very small cells. They are very active, using their tails to swim vigorously.

This diagram shows a human egg cell. The photograph, like the photograph of the sperm cells, was taken with a scanning electron microscope.

Diagram of human egg cell

Labelled diagram of an egg cell with nucleus (23 chromosomes), cytoplasm with food reserves, and cell membrane
 

Electron microscope image of egg cell

Electron microscope image of a human egg cell

Egg cells are much bigger than sperm cells, but they are still very small. A human egg cell is about the same size as a full stop. They need to be larger than sperm cells because they contain food reserves. Another difference from sperm cells is that egg cells cannot move by themselves.

 

Important Concept

Gametes are specialised reproductive cells. They carry only half the genetic information of a typical body cell (23 chromosomes in humans). Fertilisation restores the full chromosome number by combining the DNA from both gametes.

 

Questions

1. What is a gamete?
Show Answer

A gamete is a specialised sex cell that carries half the number of chromosomes (23 in humans). Sperm cells and egg cells are examples of gametes.

2. Draw a table with two columns. Write the headings ‘Sperm cell’ and ‘Egg cell’ at the top of the columns. Then make a comparison of these two cells. Try to think of at least three differences between them.
Show Answer

Sperm cell | Egg cell
Small and streamlined | Much larger and round
Can swim using tail | Cannot move by itself
Carries 23 chromosomes | Carries 23 chromosomes
Little cytoplasm | Contains food reserves in cytoplasm

 

Fertilisation

You may have noticed something odd in the labels on the diagrams of the sperm cell and the egg cell. They each have only 23 chromosomes.

In the previous topic, we saw that human cells each have 46 chromosomes in their nucleus. They have two sets, each set containing 23 chromosomes.

But gametes have only one set of chromosomes. This means that, when a sperm cell joins with an egg cell, the new cell that is produced has two sets. It will have 46 chromosomes.

The joining of a sperm cell with an egg cell is called fertilisation.

The diagram and photograph show how fertilisation takes place.

Stages of fertilisation diagram

Diagram showing sperm cell entering and fusing with egg cell
 

Fertilisation photograph under microscope

Microscope image showing fertilisation taking place

The new cell that is formed when the nucleus of the sperm cell and the egg cell join together is called a zygote.

All humans began their life as a single cell like this. Over the next days, weeks and years, this single cell divides over and over again, eventually producing all of the millions of cells in a human body.

 

Quick Fact

The zygote formed during fertilisation is the first cell of a new organism. It contains the full set of 46 chromosomes — 23 from the sperm cell and 23 from the egg cell.

 

Common Mistake

Don’t confuse the number of chromosomes in a body cell with a gamete. A body cell has 46 chromosomes, but each gamete (sperm or egg) only has 23. Fertilisation restores the full number.

 

Boy or girl?

All of the chromosomes in the cells in a human body came from the person’s mother and father. There is one set from the mother, and one set from the father. We can use this information to explain how a baby’s sex is determined.

Look at the black and white photograph in the previous topic, where the two sets of chromosomes in a cell from a woman’s body have been arranged in order. The last pair, at the bottom right of the photograph, are labelled X.

These two chromosomes are sex chromosomes. They determine whether a person is male or female. In that photograph, there are two X chromosomes. A person with two X chromosomes, XX, is female.

There is another kind of sex chromosome, called a Y chromosome.

Y chromosomes are much smaller than X chromosomes. A person with one X chromosome and one Y chromosome, XY, is male.

This photograph – again taken with a scanning electron microscope – shows a human X chromosome and Y chromosome.

X and Y chromosomes under a scanning electron microscope

Scanning electron microscope image of human X and Y chromosomes

All egg cells contain one X chromosome. Remember that gametes only have one set of chromosomes, so they only have one of each kind. However, sperm cells can have either one X chromosome or one Y chromosome.

So, each time fertilisation happens, either an X-containing sperm cell or a Y-containing sperm cell could join with an egg. If it is an X-containing sperm cell, then the zygote will have two X chromosomes, and will become a baby girl. If it is a Y-containing sperm cell, then the zygote will have one X chromosome and one Y chromosome, and will be a baby boy.

The chance of either of these events happening is about equal. This is why approximately equal numbers of boys and girls are born.

Diagram of egg and sperm chromosome combinations

How chromosomes determine the sex of a baby: XX = girl, XY = boy
 

Important Concept

The sex of a baby is determined by the type of sperm cell that fertilises the egg. All eggs carry an X chromosome. Sperm carry either an X or a Y. XX results in a girl; XY results in a boy.

 

Questions

3. What are the sex chromosomes that determine if a person is male or female?
Show Answer

The sex chromosomes are X and Y. A person with XX chromosomes is female, and a person with XY chromosomes is male.

4. Why is the sex of a baby determined by the sperm cell and not the egg cell?
Show Answer

Because all egg cells carry an X chromosome, while sperm cells can carry either an X or a Y. The chromosome in the sperm determines whether the baby will be female (XX) or male (XY).

 

Inheritance

Inheritance means passing on DNA (as chromosomes containing genes) from parents to offspring.

A baby’s sex is determined because a baby inherits X or Y chromosomes from its parents. We can use the term sex inheritance to describe this.

All organisms also inherit other features from their parents. You will find out more about this in the next topic.

 

Common Mistake

It’s a common mistake to think that only sex is inherited from parents. In fact, many other characteristics — such as eye color, blood group, and even some diseases — are passed down through genes on chromosomes.

 

Questions

5. Is it correct to say that the sex of a baby is determined by its father, not its mother? Explain your answer.
Show Answer

Yes, that is correct. All eggs contain an X chromosome, but sperm can carry either an X or a Y chromosome. The type of sperm that fertilises the egg (X or Y) determines whether the baby will be a girl (XX) or a boy (XY).

6. Explain, in your own words, why the numbers of boy and girl babies born each year is approximately equal.
Show Answer

This is because about half of all sperm cells carry an X chromosome and the other half carry a Y chromosome. This makes it equally likely for a sperm carrying either chromosome to fertilise the egg, resulting in roughly equal numbers of boys and girls being born.

 
 

 

 

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