Utilisateur
n = number of chromosomes in a gamete (haploid set). In humans, n = 23.
c = amount of DNA in a gamete (one full genome’s worth of DNA), regardless of chromosome structure.
Diploid cells have two copies of each chromosome (2n) — one from each parent. Sex chromosomes are an exception (XX or XY).
Humans are diploid (2n = 46); sperm and eggs are haploid (n = 23)
Yes. Drosophila have diploid somatic cells, just like humans.
Euploid = correct number of chromosomes (e.g., 2n = 8 in Drosophila)
Aneuploid = abnormal number (missing or extra chromosomes)
Having more than two copies of each chromosome.
Examples:
3n = triploid
4n = tetraploid
6n = hexaploid
8n = octoploid
Bananas are triploid (3n) → their chromosomes can’t pair properly in meiosis, so they are sterile.
Pasta wheat is tetraploid (4n) — every cell has four copies of each chromosome.
When all cells in the organism are polyploid (e.g., bananas, wheat).
When some cells in an otherwise diploid organism become polyploid.
* Larger
• Can make/export more proteins
• More metabolic capacity
They usually cannot divide, so they can’t reproduce.
G1 → S → G2 → M
M phase = prophase → metaphase → anaphase → telophase → cytokinesis
When two or more diploid cells merge, combining their nuclei → one polyploid cell.
Skeletal muscle cells (myoblasts fuse into long muscle fibers).
To create giant multinucleate cells that can produce huge amounts of contractile proteins.
Mitosis happens, but the cell does not split, producing a multinucleated polyploid cell.
Drosophila embryos.
To rapidly create thousands of nuclei inside one big cell before forming cell membranes.
A single large cell with many nuclei, created by skipping cytokinesis. (Early fly embryos are syncytial.)
Chromosomes separate but rejoin into one nucleus, making a single giant polyploid nucleus.
Megakaryocytes (platelet-producing cells).
To become huge factories for making and exporting platelets.
They expel their nucleus during maturation, becoming smaller and more flexible.
DNA keeps replicating (S phase repeats) → nucleus becomes extremely polyploid.
Larval organ cells (salivary glands, gut, etc.).
They need to make huge amounts of proteins (e.g., sticky salivary glue) but do not divide.
Diploid cells inside larvae that will become adult tissues (they must still divide).
Skeletal muscle
• Megakaryocytes
• Cancer cells
• Placenta
• Liver
Muscle → cell fusion
Megakaryocytes → skip telophase & cytokinesis
RBCs → nucleus expelled
Liver & placenta → endocycles (skip mitosis)
sgs (salivary gland secretion) genes are highly amplified in polyploid salivary gland cells, allowing the larva to make huge amounts of sticky glue proteins that attach it to a surface during pupation (metamorphosis).
