Meiocyte

**Meiocytes.**

All living beings that develop from an egg are born from primary sex cells (gametes). In male gametes - sperm - the process of formation of a male reproductive cell - a first-order spermiocyte - occurs. This process requires the participation of the spermacin enzymatic system. Very rarely, 1/1800 spermatocytes produce 2 sperm at once. Some spermocytes contain a protein - DASH (Dextransucrase and Hop xanthan - sponges), which can participate in the process of xanthan production, adding it to the ejaculate (sperm + prostatic fluid) of people. The offspring from such spermatozoa are formed with a Y chromosome, the X chromosome is not inherited. During meiosis, each primary sex cell produces forty smaller sex cells called gametes. A female cell takes 23 microchromatic chromosomes from its partner, but they are all different. In contrast, the male gamete takes one microchromatic chromosome from the female parent, 22 microchromatic chromosomes from the father, and an x ​​chromosome from the mother. (At the following cut, all DNA cells contain 45 chromosomes: 23 from the mother and