Comparing Meiosis & Mitosis (AQA AS Biology): Revision Note
Exam code: 7401
Mitosis vs meiosis
- Mitosis and meiosis are both forms of cell division 
- Mitosis ends with two daughter cells genetically identical to each other and the parent cell - This is important so that growth and cell replacement can occur within the body continually 
- Every cell in an organism's body (other than gametes) contains the same genetic material - the full genome 
 
- Meiosis ends with four daughter cells all of which contain half the genetic material of the parent cell and are all different from each other and the parent - This is important for genetic variation within families and the population 
- Genetic variation can reduce the risk of inheriting genetic diseases 
 
| Mitosis | Meiosis | 
|---|---|
| Used for growth and repair | Used for production of gametes | 
| Cell divides once | Cell divides twice | 
| Daughter cells are genetically identical to parent cell | Daughter cells are genetically different to parent cell | 
| Daughter cells are genetically identical to each other | Daughter cells are genetically different to each other | 
| Daughter cells are diploid (46 chromosomes) | Daughter cells are haploid (23 chromosomes) gametes | 
| Two daughter cells produced | Four daughter cells produced | 
| Occurs all over the body | Occurs in the sex organs | 

Examiner Tips and Tricks
It is common for a question to ask you to identify where meiosis is occurring in an unfamiliar life cycle. There is a helpful trick for this, meiosis always involves a reduction division. This is a nuclear division that reduces the chromosome number of a cell. So, when the ploidy of the cell is halved, it can be said that meiosis has just occurred.
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