FACTOID # 150: The average person in the United Kingdom drinks as much tea as 23 Italians.
 
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Encyclopedia > Crossing over

Chromosomal crossover is the process by which two chromosomes, paired up during Prophase I of meiosis, exchange some distal portion of their DNA. Crossover occurs when two chromosomes, normally two homologous instances of the same chromosome, break and then reconnect but to the different end piece. If they break at the same place or locus in the sequence of base pairs, the result is an exchange of genes. This outcome is the normal way for crossover to occur. If they break at slightly different loci, the result can be a duplication of genes on one chromosome and a deletion of these on the other. If they break and rejoin on opposite sides of the centromere, the result can be one chromosome being lost during cell division.


Any pair of homologous chromosomes may be expected to cross over three or four times during meiosis. This aids evolution by increasing independent assortment, and reducing the genetic linkage between genes on the same chromosome.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Chromosomal crossover - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (327 words)
If chromosomes break on both sides of the same centromere and rejoin to exclude the centromere, the result can be one chromosome being lost during cell division.
Any pair of homologous chromosomes may be expected to cross over multiple times during meiosis, depending on the species and length of the chromosome.
Crossing over was first described by Thomas Hunt Morgan, and the physical basis of crossing over was first demonstrated by Harriet Creighton and Barbara McClintock in 1931.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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