Ap Bio Lab 3
Ap Bio Lab 3
Ap Bio Lab 3
Period:
Date:
The following prelab activities must be completed prior to conducting the lab.
PreLab: Write a few (2-3) introductory paragraphs that provide background information about
mitosis and meiosis. Use the following questions to guide you:
1. Where do new cells come from?
2. Distinguish between the terms karyokinesis and cytokinesis.
3. What type of cell is formed by meiosis?
4. What type of cell is formed via mitosis? Describe four functions of mitotic division.
5. Where does one find cells undergoing mitosis in a plant? In an animal?
6. Where does mitosis occur in a plant root?
7. Name the three zones of a root; briefly describe the function of each (see Campbell &
Reece, pp 721-722).
8. What type of fungus is Sodaria fimicola?
9. What are the following? ASCUS, ASCOSPORES, PERITHECIUM
10. Why are there 8 spores in an ascus?
11. Summarize the key points of the Sordaria life cycle and crossing over. Use the
background information provided below or found in your textbook and online.
Exercise 3A: Observing mitosis in plant and animals cells using prepared slides of the
onion root tip and whitefish blastula
1. Go www.biology.com and select
. This web site has three resources you
should be aware of. Choose LabBench, then select AP Lab 3: Mitosis and Meiosis. Read
through the Introduction, Design of the Experiment-I and Key Concepts-I for Mitosis.
Complete the Analysis of Results-I and LabQuiz I.
Exercise 3B: Crossing over during Meiosis in Sordaria
1. Go to www.biology.com and and LabBench and select AP Lab 3: Mitosis and Meiosis.
Read through Key Concepts-II for meiosis and Design of the Experiment-II.
Complete the Analysis of Results-II, Comparison of mitosis and meiosis, and LabQuiz II.
Introduction
All new cells come from previously existing cells. New cells are formed by the process of
cell division, which involves both division of the cells nucleus (karyokinesis) and division of
the cytoplasm (cytokinesis).
There are two types of nuclear division: mitosis and meiosis. Mitosis typically results in
new somatic (body) cells. Formation of an adult organism from a fertilized egg, asexual
reproduction, regeneration, and maintenance or repair of body parts are accomplished through
mitotic cell division. You will study mitosis in Exercise 3A.
Where does one find cells undergoing mitosis? Plants and animals differ in this respect.
In higher plants the process of forming new cells is restricted to special growth regions called
meristems. These regions usually occur at the tips of stems or roots. In animals, cell division
occurs anywhere new cells are formed or as new cells replace old ones. However, some tissues in
both plants and animals rarely divide once the organism is mature.
To study the stages of mitosis, you need to look for tissues where there are many cells in
the process of mitosis. This restricts your search to the tips of growing plants, such as the onion
root tip, or, in the case of animals, to developing embryos, such as the whitefish blastula.
Exercise 3A.1: Observing mitosis in plant and animals cells using prepared slides of the
onion root tip and whitefish blastula
Roots consist of different regions (see Figure bleow). The root cap functions in
protection. The apical meristem is the region that contains the highest percentage of cells
undergoing mitosis. The region of elongation is the area in which growth occurs. The region of
maturation is where root hairs develop and where cells differentiate to become xylem, phloem
and other tissues.
It is hard to imagine that you can estimate how much time a cell spends in each phase of
cell replication from a slide of dead cells. Yet this is precisely what you will do in this part of the
lab. Since you are working with a prepared slide, you cannot get any information about how long
it takes a cell to divide. What you can determine is how many cells are in each phase. From this,
you can infer the percent of time each cell spends in each phase.
PROCEDURE:
1. Observe cells during each mitotic phase. Obtain a prepared slide of an onion root tip or a
whitefish blastula. Use 40X, then 100X magnification on a compound microscope to locate
the meristematic region of the onion root tip or the blastula of the fish embryo. Study
individual cells at 400X. Identify one cell that clearly represents each phase of mitosis;
sketch and label the cells in Table 3.1 Your sketch should be a careful drawing of what you
see under the microscope. Describe the events occurring during each phase.
Table 3.1
Mitotic Phase
Description
Schematic Drawing
w/4 chromosomes
Drawing from
Prepared Slide
(Onion Root or Fish Blastula)
Interphase
Prophase
Metaphase
Anaphase
Telophase &
Cytokinesis
2. Estimate the time for cell replication. By counting the number of cells in each mitotic phase
you can infer the percentage of time each cell spends in each phase. The length of the cell
cycle is approximately 24 hours for cells in actively dividing onion root tips.
a) Observe every cell in one high power (400X) field of view and determine which phase of
the cell cycle it is in. This is best done in pairs. The partner observing the slide calls out
the phase of each cell while the other partner records the data in Table 3.2. Then switch
so the recorder becomes the observer and vice versa. Count at least two full fields of
view. If you have not counted at least 200 cells, count a third field of view.
b) Calculate the percentage of cells in each phase and record in Table 3.2. Consider that it
takes, on average 24 hours (1440 minutes) for onion root tip cells to complete the cell
cycle. You can calculate the amount of time spent in each phase of the cell cycle from the
percentage of cells in that stage.
Percent of cells in stage X 1,440 minutes = minutes of cell cycle spent in stage
Table 3.2
Field 1
Number of Cells
Field 2
Field 3
Total
% of Total
Cells
Counted
Time in
Each
Mitotic
Stage
Interphase
Prophase
Metaphase
Anaphase
Telophase
Total Cells Counted
6. If your observations had not been restricted to the area of the root tip that is actively
dividing, how would your results have been different?
7. Use the data in Table 3.2 to draw and label a pie chart on the onion root tip cell cycle.
Remember to put a title on your pie chart.
Exercise 3B: Crossing over during Meiosis in Sordaria
Background Information:
Crossing Over during Meiosis in Sordaria
Sordaria fimicola is an ascomycete fungus that can be used to demonstrate the results of
crossing over during meiosis. Sordaria is a haploid organism for most of its life cycle. It becomes
diploid only when the fusion of the mycelia (very small filaments) of two different strains results in
the fusion of the two different types of haploid nuclei to form a diploid nucleus. The diploid nucleus
must then undergo meiosis to resume its haploid state.
Meiosis, followed by mitosis, in Sordaria results in the formation of eight haploid
ascospores contained within a sac called an ascus (plural, asci). Many asci are contained within a
fruiting body called a perithecium. When ascospores are mature the ascus ruptures, releasing the
ascospores. Each ascospore can develop into a new haploid fungus. The life cycle of Sordaria
fimicola is shown in Figure 1.
To observe crossing over in Sordaria, one must make hybrids between wild-type and mutant
strains of Sordaria. Wild-type (+) Sordaria have black ascospores. One mutant strain has tan
spores (tn). When mycelia of these two different strains come together and undergo meiosis, the asci
that develop will contain four black ascospores and four tan ascospores. The arrangement of the
spores directly reflects whether or not crossing over has occurred. In Figure 2, no crossing over has
occurred. Figure 3 shows the results of crossing over between the centromere of the chromosome and
the gene for ascospore color.
Two homologous chromosomes line up at metaphase I of meiosis. The two chromatids of one
chromosome each carry the gene for tan spore color (tn) and the two chromatids of the other
chromosome carry the gene for wild-type spore color (+).
The first meiotic division (MI) results in two cells each containing just one type of spore
color gene (either tan or wild-type). Therefore, segregation of these genes has occurred at the first
meiotic division (MI). The second meiotic division (MII) results in four cells, each with the haploid
number of chromosomes (lN). A mitotic division simply duplicates these cells, resulting in 8 spores.
They are arranged in the 4:4 pattern.
In this example, crossing over has occurred in the region between the gene for spore color
and the centromere. The homologous chromosomes separate during meiosis I. This time, the MI
results in two cells, each containing both genes (1 tan, 1 wild-type); therefore, the genes for spore
color have not yet segregated. Meiosis II (MII) results in segregation of the two types of genes for
spore color. A mitotic division results in 8 spores arranged in the 2:2:2:2 or 2:4:2 pattern.
Any one of these spore arrangements would indicate that crossing over has occurred between
the gene for spore coat color and the centromere.
Two strains of Sordaria (wild-type and tan mutant) have been inoculated on a plate of agar.
Where the mycelia of the two strains meet (Figure 4), fruiting bodies called perithecia develop.
Meiosis occurs within the perithecia during the formation of asci. A slide has been prepared of some
perithecia (the black dots in figure 4).
Fig. 4
PROCEDURE:
1. Obtain a set of color photographs that show several squished perithecia that resulted
from a fusion of black wild type and tan mutant haploid mycelia. Each perithecium
contains many acsi; each ascus contains 8 ascospores. Your job is to count at least 50
hybrid asci, determining the #asci with non-crossover (4:4) and crossover (2:4:2 or
2:2:2:2) patterns within the asci. Enter your data in Table 3.3.
2. Calculations for Table 3.3:
% Crossover = # Crossover asci divided by total #asci X 100
Map Distance = % Crossover asci divided by 2 (to account for the effects of
mitosis only half of the spores in each ascus are the result of
meiosis)
Table 3.3
# NonCrossover
Asci
(4:4)
# Crossover
Asci
(2:4:2 or
2:2:2:2)
Total # Asci
% Asci
showing
crossover
Gene to
Centromere
Distance
(Calculated as %
Asci showing
crossover 2
(Centimorgans))
The frequency of crossing over appears to be governed largely by the distance between
genes, or in this case, between the gene for spore coat color and the centromere. The probability of a
crossover occurring between two particular genes on the same chromosome (linked genes) increases
as the distance between those genes becomes larger. The frequency of crossover, therefore, appears to
be directly proportional to the distance between genes.
A map unit is an arbitrary unit of measure used to describe relative distances between linked
genes. The number of map units between two genes or between a gene and the centromere is equal to
the percentage of recombinants. Customary units cannot be used because we cannot directly visualize
genes with the light microscope. However, due to the relationship between distance and crossover
frequency, we may use the map unit.
The frequency of crossing over appears to be governed largely by the distance between
genes, or in this case, between the gene for spore coat color and the centromere. The probability of a
crossover occurring between two particular genes on the same chromosome (linked genes) increases
as the distance between those genes becomes larger. The frequency of crossover, therefore, appears to
be directly proportional to the distance between genes.
A map unit is an arbitrary unit of measure used to describe relative distances between linked genes.
The number of map units between two genes or between a gene and the centromere is equal to the
percentage of recombinants. Customary units cannot be used because we cannot directly visualize
genes with the light microscope. However, due to the relationship between distance and crossover
frequency, we may use the map unit.