Examples of homologous structure in the following topics:
-
- Homology is the relationship between structures or DNA derived from the most recent common ancestor.
- If we go all the way back to the beginning of life, all structures are homologous!
- As a result, hybrid or mosaic structures can evolve that exhibit partial homologies.
- The opposite of homologous structures are analogous structures, which are physically similar structures between two taxa that evolved separately (rather than being present in the last common ancestor).
- Describe the connection between evolution and the appearance of homologous structures
-
- Similar traits can be either homologous structures that share an embryonic origin or analogous structures that share a function.
- For example, the bones in the wings of bats and birds have homologous structures .
- Homologous structures share a similar embryonic origin; analogous organs have a similar function.
- Some structures are both analogous and homologous: the wings of a bird and the wings of a bat are both homologous and analogous.
- Bat and bird wings are homologous structures, indicating that bats and birds share a common evolutionary past.
-
- These unused structures without function are called vestigial structures.
- Vestigial structures are often homologous to structures that function normally in other species.
- In some cases the structure becomes detrimental to the organism.
- The vestigial versions of a structure can be compared to the original version of the structure in other species in order to determine the homology of the structure.
- Homologous structures indicate common ancestry with those organisms that have a functional version of the structure.
-
- However, the wings of bats and insects have evolved from very different original structures.
- Their last common ancestor had at most a very simple photoreceptive spot, but a range of processes led to the progressive refinement of this structure to the advanced camera eye.
- Traits arising through convergent evolution are analogous structures, in contrast to homologous structures, which have a common origin, but not necessarily similar function.
- The British anatomist Richard Owen was the first scientist to recognize the fundamental difference between analogies and homologies.
- Bat and pterosaur wings are an example of analogous structures, while the bat wing is homologous to human and other mammal forearms, sharing an ancestral state despite serving different functions.
-
- During meiosis, homologous chromosome pairs migrate as discrete structures that are independent of other chromosome pairs.
- The sorting of chromosomes from each homologous pair into pre-gametes appears to be random.
-
- Most recombination is naturally occurring and the rearrangement of DNA can occur by several different mechanisms and result in structural variation.
- It is known that this pairing and interaction between homologous chromosomes, known as synapsis, does more than simply organize the homologs for migration to separate daughter cells.
- When synapsed, homologous chromosomes undergo reciprocal physical exchanges at their arms .
- In meiosis and mitosis, recombination occurs between similar molecules (homologs) of DNA.
- Recombination can occur between DNA sequences that contain no sequence homology.
-
- Structural rearrangements of chromosomes include both inversions and translocations, which may have detrimental effects on an organism.
- Cytologists have characterized numerous structural rearrangements in chromosomes, but chromosome inversions and translocations are the most common.
- To maintain point-for-point synapsis during meiosis, one homolog must form a loop, and the other homolog must mold around it.
- Not all structural rearrangements of chromosomes produce nonviable, impaired, or infertile individuals.
- Describe the various types of structural rearrangements of chromosomes and how they can impact an organism
-
- The centrosomes, which are the structures that organize the microtubules of the meiotic spindle, also replicate.
- The tight pairing of the homologous chromosomes is called synapsis.
- The homologous pairs orient themselves randomly at the equator.
- Crossover occurs between non-sister chromatids of homologous chromosomes.
- Early in prophase I, homologous chromosomes come together to form a synapse.
-
- Before discussing the steps a cell must undertake to replicate, a deeper understanding of the structure and function of a cell's genetic information is necessary.
- Matched pairs of chromosomes in a diploid organism are called homologous ("same knowledge") chromosomes.
- Each copy of a homologous pair of chromosomes originates from a different parent; therefore, the genes themselves are not identical.
- The sex chromosomes, X and Y, are the single exception to the rule of homologous chromosome uniformity.
- There are 23 pairs of homologous chromosomes in a female human somatic cell.
-
- Phylogenetic trees are constructed according to the evolutionary relationships that exist between organisms based on homologous traits.
- In particular, they clarify whether certain traits are homologous (found in the common ancestor as a result of divergent evolution) or homoplasy (sometimes referred to as analogous: a character that is not found in a common ancestor, but whose function developed independently in two or more organisms through convergent evolution).
- Lophotrochozoa is named for two structural features, each common to certain phyla within the clade.
- Some lophotrochozoan phyla are characterized by a larval stage called trochophore larvae, and other phyla are characterized by the presence of a feeding structure called a lophophore.