(Redirected from Gametes)A 'gamete' (from
Ancient Greek ''γαμετης''; translated ''gamete'' = wife, ''gametes'' = husband) is a specialized sex cell that fuses with another gamete during
fertilization (conception) in
organisms that
reproduce sexually. In species which produce two morphologically distinct types of gametes, and in which each individual produces only one type, a
female is any individual which produces the larger type of gamete—called an
ovum (or egg)—and a
male produces the smaller type—called a
spermatozoon (or sperm cell). This is an example of
anisogamy or
heterogamy, the condition wherein females and males produce gametes of different sizes. In contrast,
isogamyis the state of gametes from both sexes being the same size.
The name gamete was introduced by the
Austrian biologist
Gregor Mendel.
Creation

Scheme showing analogies in the process of maturation of the ovum and the development of the spermatids.
The creation of gametes is gametogenesis, and during it
gametocytes divide by
meiosis into gametes. Meiosis is a process of cellular division that reduces the number of sets of chromosomes from two to one (i.e., produces haploid gametes). Organs that produce gametes are called
gonads in animals, and
archegonia or
antheridia in plants.
Gamete cycle
A gamete of one generation ultimately creates a gametes in the next generation, but still keeping the same quantity of genetic information.
Gametes are
haploid cells; that is, they contain one complete set of
chromosomes (the actual number varies from species to species). When two gametes fuse (in animals typically involving a sperm and an egg), they form a ''
zygote''—a cell that has two complete sets of chromosomes and therefore is
diploid. The zygote receives one set of chromosomes from each of the two gametes through the fusion of the two gamete
nuclei. After multiple
cell divisions and
cellular differentiation, a zygote
develops, first into an
embryo, and ultimately into a mature individual capable of producing gametes.
Dissimilarity
In contrast to a gamete, the diploid
somatic cells of an individual contain one copy of the chromosome set from the sperm and one copy of the chromosome set from the egg; that is, the cells of the offspring have genes expressing characteristics of both the ''father'' and the ''mother''. A gamete's chromosomes are not exact duplicates of either of the sets of chromosomes carried in the somatic cells of the individual that produced the gametes. They can be ''hybrids'' produced through
crossover(a form of
genetic recombination) of chromosomes, which takes place in meiosis. This hybridization has a random element, and the chromosomes tend to be a little different in every gamete that an individual produces. This recombination and the fact that the two chromosome sets ultimately come from either a grandmother or a grandfather on each parental side account for the
genetic dissimilarity of
sibling's.