Science Puzzle

Genetic Thread Count

Life Science Spark ⚡
body cell 46 chromosomes (23 pairs) egg cell 23 chromosomes sperm 23 chromosomes + new cell 46 chromosomes Why do egg and sperm each carry only half the chromosome number?
Fig. 1: Body cells carry 46 chromosomes. Sex cells carry 23. Fertilisation restores the full count.

Most human body cells contain 46 chromosomes, arranged in 23 matching pairs. But egg cells and sperm cells each contain only 23 chromosomes, one from each pair.

Why do sex cells carry only half the normal number of chromosomes?

The Answer

Because fertilisation doubles the chromosome number. When a sperm fertilises an egg, the two cells fuse and their genetic material combines. If both cells carried 46 chromosomes, the resulting fertilised egg would have 92, and every generation would double the number again.

To prevent this runaway doubling, sex cells are produced by a special type of cell division called meiosis, which halves the chromosome count. Ordinary cell division (mitosis) preserves the full count; meiosis reduces it by half.

The result: each parent contributes exactly 23 chromosomes to the offspring, giving the offspring the correct 46 total, 23 from the mother and 23 from the father. The specific which chromosome from each pair is passed on is shuffled randomly during meiosis, which is one source of genetic variation between siblings.

The principle: Chromosomal inheritance and meiosis. Sex cells carry half the usual chromosome number so that fertilisation restores the correct full count rather than doubling it with each generation.