AP Biology - Unit 5 Study Guide
5.1

Meiosis

Meiosis is a type of cell division that produces gametes (sex cells: sperm and eggs). It reduces the chromosome number by half, from diploid (2n) to haploid (n).

Mitosis vs. Meiosis
Feature Mitosis Meiosis
Purpose Growth, repair, asexual reproduction Produce gametes for sexual reproduction
Divisions 1 division 2 divisions (Meiosis I & II)
Daughter Cells 2 identical cells 4 genetically unique cells
Chromosome Number 2n → 2n (stays diploid) 2n → n (becomes haploid)
Genetic Variation None (clones) Yes (crossing over, independent assortment)
Meiosis Overview Parent Cell (2n = 4) MEIOSIS I (Reduction Division) Homologous pairs separate • Crossing over occurs (n = 2) (n = 2) MEIOSIS II (Like Mitosis) Sister chromatids separate (n) (n) (n) (n) 4 Haploid Gametes (all genetically different!)
Meiosis consists of two divisions: Meiosis I separates homologous chromosomes, and Meiosis II separates sister chromatids. The result is 4 haploid cells.
Stages of Meiosis I

Prophase I

  • Chromosomes condense
  • Synapsis: Homologs pair up
  • Crossing over occurs
  • Nuclear envelope breaks

Metaphase I

  • Homologous pairs line up at metaphase plate
  • Independent assortment
  • Random orientation

Anaphase I

  • Homologs separate
  • Sister chromatids stay together
  • Pulled to opposite poles

Telophase I

  • Nuclear envelopes may reform
  • Cytokinesis occurs
  • 2 haploid cells formed
Key Distinction: In Meiosis I, homologous chromosomes separate (reduction division). In Meiosis II, sister chromatids separate (like mitosis). This is a common source of confusion on exams!
AP Exam Tip: Meiosis I is the "reduction" division because it reduces chromosome number from 2n to n. Meiosis II is similar to mitosis — it just separates sister chromatids.
5.2

Meiosis and Genetic Diversity

Meiosis generates genetic diversity through three main mechanisms. This variation is the raw material for natural selection and evolution.

Three Sources of Genetic Variation in Meiosis
1. Crossing Over

Occurs during Prophase I

Homologous chromosomes exchange segments of DNA at chiasmata

2. Independent Assortment

Occurs during Metaphase I

Random orientation of homologous pairs at the metaphase plate

3. Random Fertilization

Occurs at conception

Any sperm can fertilize any egg — millions of combinations!

Crossing Over (Prophase I) BEFORE A B a b Homologous pair (tetrad) Synapsis CROSSING OVER Chiasma (crossing point) AFTER A b a B Recombinant! New allele combos Original: AB and ab → Recombinant: Ab and aB
Crossing over exchanges genetic material between homologous chromosomes, creating new combinations of alleles that didn't exist in either parent.
Independent Assortment: How Many Combinations?

During metaphase I, each homologous pair can orient in either direction. The formula for possible gamete combinations is:

2n = number of combinations

Where n = haploid number of chromosomes

Humans (n = 23)

2²³ = 8,388,608

possible gamete types

Combined (egg × sperm)

8M × 8M = ~70 trillion

possible zygote combinations

+ Crossing Over

Essentially infinite!

genetic variation

AP Exam Tip: Be able to explain WHY genetic diversity is important for evolution: it provides variation for natural selection to act upon. Without meiosis, all offspring would be genetically identical (clones), limiting adaptation to changing environments.
5.3

Mendelian Genetics

Gregor Mendel discovered the fundamental laws of inheritance by studying pea plants. His work forms the foundation of modern genetics.

Key Vocabulary
Term Definition
Gene A unit of heredity; a segment of DNA that codes for a trait
Allele Different versions of a gene (e.g., B and b)
Dominant Allele that is expressed when present (uppercase: B)
Recessive Allele only expressed when homozygous (lowercase: b)
Genotype The genetic makeup (e.g., BB, Bb, bb)
Phenotype The physical expression of the genotype (e.g., brown eyes)
Homozygous Two identical alleles (BB or bb)
Heterozygous Two different alleles (Bb)
Law of Segregation
The two alleles for each gene separate during gamete formation (meiosis). Each gamete receives only ONE allele for each gene.

Parent Bb → Gametes: B or b

Law of Independent Assortment
Genes for different traits are inherited independently of each other (if on different chromosomes).

AaBb → Gametes: AB, Ab, aB, ab

Monohybrid Cross: Bb × Bb

A cross involving ONE trait. Let's cross two heterozygous parents:

B
b
B
BB
Bb
b
Bb
bb

Genotypic Ratio: 1 BB : 2 Bb : 1 bb

Phenotypic Ratio: 3 dominant : 1 recessive

Dihybrid Cross: AaBb × AaBb

A cross involving TWO traits. Each parent makes 4 types of gametes (AB, Ab, aB, ab):

AB Ab aB ab
AB AABB AABb AaBB AaBb
Ab AABb AAbb AaBb Aabb
aB AaBB AaBb aaBB aaBb
ab AaBb Aabb aaBb aabb

Phenotypic Ratio:

9 A_B_ 3 A_bb 3 aaB_ 1 aabb
Test Cross: Finding Unknown Genotypes

To determine if an individual showing the dominant phenotype is homozygous (BB) or heterozygous (Bb), cross it with a homozygous recessive (bb) individual:

If BB × bb:

All offspring Bb (all dominant)

If Bb × bb:

50% Bb, 50% bb (1:1 ratio)

AP Exam Tip: Memorize these ratios! Monohybrid Bb × Bb = 3:1. Dihybrid AaBb × AaBb = 9:3:3:1. Test cross with recessive = 1:1 if heterozygous.
5.4

Non-Mendelian Genetics

Not all inheritance follows Mendel's simple dominant/recessive patterns. Many traits show more complex inheritance patterns.

Types of Non-Mendelian Inheritance
Pattern Description Example
Incomplete Dominance Heterozygote shows intermediate phenotype (blend) Red × White = Pink snapdragons
Codominance Both alleles fully expressed simultaneously AB blood type (both A and B antigens present)
Multiple Alleles More than 2 alleles exist in the population ABO blood types (IA, IB, i)
Polygenic Inheritance Multiple genes affect one trait (continuous variation) Human height, skin color, eye color
Epistasis One gene affects expression of another gene Labrador coat color (E gene masks B gene)
Pleiotropy One gene affects multiple phenotypes Sickle cell gene → anemia, malaria resistance
Sex-Linked Genes located on sex chromosomes (usually X) Colorblindness, hemophilia
INCOMPLETE DOMINANCE Heterozygote = BLEND RR Red × WW White RW PINK! CODOMINANCE Heterozygote = BOTH expressed IAIA Type A × IBIB Type B IAIB TYPE AB! (Both A and B antigens)
Sex-Linked Inheritance (X-Linked)

Genes on the X chromosome show different inheritance patterns in males vs females:

Females (XX)

Have TWO X chromosomes

Can be: XHXH (normal), XHXh (carrier), XhXh (affected)

Males (XY)

Have only ONE X chromosome

Can be: XHY (normal) or XhY (affected) — no carriers!

Result: X-linked recessive disorders (like colorblindness, hemophilia) are much more common in males.

X-Linked Cross: Carrier Female × Normal Male

Colorblindness: XC = normal vision, Xc = colorblind

Cross: XCXc (carrier female) × XCY (normal male)

XC
Y
XC
XCXC
♀ Normal
XCY
♂ Normal
Xc
XCXc
♀ Carrier
XcY
♂ Colorblind!

Result: 50% of sons will be colorblind; 0% of daughters will be colorblind (but 50% are carriers)

Linked Genes & Recombination

Genes on the same chromosome tend to be inherited together (linked). However, crossing over can separate them.

Recombination frequency = (# recombinant offspring / total offspring) × 100

The farther apart genes are on a chromosome, the MORE likely crossing over will occur between them.

AP Exam Tip: For sex-linked problems, always write out the full genotype including the sex chromosomes (X and Y). Remember: males only need ONE recessive allele to show the trait, while females need TWO.
5.5

Environmental Effects on Phenotype

Phenotype is determined by both genotype AND environment. The same genotype can produce different phenotypes depending on environmental conditions.

The Big Picture: Nature vs. Nurture
Phenotype = Genotype + Environment
Examples of Environmental Effects on Phenotype
Organism Environmental Factor Effect on Phenotype
Siamese Cats Temperature Cooler body parts (ears, nose, paws, tail) have darker fur due to temperature-sensitive enzyme
Hydrangeas Soil pH Same plant produces blue flowers in acidic soil, pink in basic soil
Human Height Nutrition Malnutrition can prevent reaching genetic potential for height
Himalayan Rabbits Temperature Similar to Siamese cats — dark fur on cold extremities
Flamingos Diet Pink color comes from carotenoids in diet; without them, they're white
Arctic Fox Season (temperature/light) White coat in winter, brown in summer
Temperature-Sensitive Phenotype (Siamese Cat) COOL (~25°C) Enzyme ACTIVE → Melanin made → DARK fur WARM (~37°C) Enzyme INACTIVE → No melanin → LIGHT fur Same Genotype! The gene is the same everywhere, but the enzyme only works at low temperatures.
In Siamese cats, the enzyme that produces melanin (dark pigment) is temperature-sensitive. It only works at cooler temperatures, so the cat's extremities (which are cooler) develop dark fur.
Norm of Reaction

The norm of reaction describes the range of phenotypes that a single genotype can produce across different environments.

Narrow Norm of Reaction

Genotype produces similar phenotype regardless of environment

Example: Blood type (environment doesn't change it)

Wide Norm of Reaction

Genotype produces very different phenotypes in different environments

Example: Human height, behavior

Multifactorial Traits
Most traits are influenced by:
  • Multiple genes (polygenic)
  • Environmental factors
  • Interactions between genes and environment

Examples: Heart disease risk, intelligence, athletic ability

Epigenetics
Environmental factors can cause chemical modifications to DNA or histones that affect gene expression without changing the DNA sequence.

Examples:

  • DNA methylation (often silences genes)
  • Histone modification

Some epigenetic changes can be inherited!

Important Distinction: Environmental effects on phenotype do NOT change the DNA sequence. The genotype remains the same — only the expression changes. This is different from mutations, which DO change the DNA.
AP Exam Tip: Be ready to explain why identical twins (same genotype) can have different phenotypes. Environmental factors like nutrition, exercise, disease exposure, and even random developmental differences can cause phenotypic variation despite identical DNA.
Unit 5 Summary: Key Concepts
Meiosis

2 divisions → 4 haploid gametes

Genetic Variation

Crossing over, independent assortment, random fertilization

Mendelian Ratios

3:1 (monohybrid), 9:3:3:1 (dihybrid)

Non-Mendelian

Incomplete dominance, codominance, sex-linked, polygenic

← Unit 4 Unit 6: Gene Expression →