Title | : | Molecular Biology #1 2020 |
Lasting | : | 1.30.28 |
Date of publication | : | |
Views | : | 138 rb |
|
So we can asume the enzyme breaking down hydrogen peroxide, because its free floating Will reveal older people less active, as more bleeched?brI know hardly any people produce same ratio of this enzyme, but It made this very much more interesting, just thinking its possible Comment from : The Druid |
|
could I have had the opportunity to see this very presentation as I was a medicine student !!! Comment from : Ezzo von Achalm |
|
1:07:04 Comment from : Thomas Harty |
|
Excellent! Explanations laying out in orderly, contextually thorough fashion what physically/visually happens, and why, via layman descriptions, before adding terminology Rare So often, teaching begins with, and emphasizes, terminology and abstractions, and fails to clearly link processes Thank you! Comment from : Rolling Tree |
|
Who is older? The students? Or the professor? I watched this at 175x and it was still too slow Comment from : Lars Larsen |
|
33:00 this is so fascinating it looks like machine code, like binary code (obiously it's not truly "binary" but you get the point) Our bodies are truly just machines, the most marvellous machines to ever exist I'm going to start my degree in biomedical engineering soon because of the fascination i have for nature and the desire to contribute to people's health using technology Comment from : Neophyte |
|
Some of the questions from the audience are interesting Comment from : Miko Play |
|
Great lesson Would be good if your cursor were a bit more prominent Hard to know where your pointing sometimes Comment from : Kaina Jones |
|
Here's a question: How do Fluoroquinolones work and how do they affect/damage DNA?? Comment from : ShellsPink |
|
A profound lesson on the introductory of Molecular biology, the fundamentals are truly astonishing you made a rather complex lesson turn into a simple explanation of the functions of cells to a whole new level Comment from : Not ? |
|
Poor articulation of the material TRNA? Come on, man Transfer RNA Comment from : KTL45 |
|
40:59 / 1:30:27 Comment from : Maeby Valentina Montes Millán |
|
مين دا Comment from : غازي بس |
|
Hello, I’m a retired NASA aerospace engineer with no real background in cell biology, but I’m just dumbfounded by the apparent design I see here with all these intricate chemical mechanisms at work I was thinking about the origin of the first living cell on earth If you need a large macromolecule like a ribosome to build other protein molecules, it raises the question of the origin of the first ribosome and the origin of the DNA assembly instructions to build that first ribosome You run into a chicken and egg dilemma - seems like you would first need a ribosome to build the first ribosome Not only that, seems like you would first need a living cell to build the first living cell! I may have to rethink my evolutionary assumptions on this issue I honestly have a difficult time believing this whole transcription, translation, protein synthesis process in the first living organism came about through random natural processes - even over millions of years Comment from : Rodney Spence |
|
Such a complicated structure couldn't just happen by chance, nature itself is pure intelligence, and it boggles the mind! Comment from : MARK SILVER |
|
3:00 Comment from : Instruments 🎵 |
|
DNA also has been found to work in the 4th dimension of time Dr Robert Cater covers this on YouTube Comment from : Mark OConnell |
|
No he said 15 was from viruses It is not junk DNA As more research is done more of the 90 is found to do things Comment from : Mark OConnell |
|
God is so amazing Comment from : Mark OConnell |
|
The DNA also reads backwards too Comment from : Mark OConnell |
|
That extra code on the end I would guess is for the purpose of repair the code should it be degraded enough I could be wrong certainly Hopefully we will discover what it does later on Comment from : Mark OConnell |
|
So the code to make the protein which it binds to on the DNA to start is from the DNA to begin with This is why the topoisomerase so important so a factor can get to the binding spot it is programmed for on a molecular level Brilliant method Thank you to whomever discovered this Comment from : Mark OConnell |
|
I do not believe that 15 being left over virus is a correct view anymore All of the 90 do things Medical researchers are classifying what this 90 does Comment from : Mark OConnell |
|
How does the binding factor know the correct spot to bind to the DNA? Why that spot versus any and every other spot on the DNA of the bacteria trying to get the sugar molecule? Comment from : Mark OConnell |
|
don't speak like a teacher please use loquendo do not take air by the mouth Comment from : james hopkins |
|
1:22:35 this is an interesting question because "purpose" and "function" are words we see all the time in biology in explanations for why something is the way it is, but you don't see that in other sciences as often A geologist isn't going to tell you purpose or function of why a rock exists, just how Comment from : Lugus |
|
Very informative right off the bat The slides really helped along with the presentation Thank you for taking the time to create these videos and inform the public on such interesting and important subjects Comment from : K C |
|
Topic is well-explainedthank you this video Comment from : Maharlika warrior |
|
Can you go from a BS in molecular biology and genetics to wildlife biology? Comment from : Kender the extremophile |
|
You are amazing what a very informative lecture Comment from : zaid gamer |
|
Can anyone suggest me the first very book for molecular biology ( I am in class 10 ) Comment from : Affan Alam |
|
whats the relationship in Biochemistry, Molecular Biology and Genetics Comment from : luao siwale |
|
The question answered at 14:18 is excellent It’s cool that you can find lectures and talks like this on the Tube Comment from : Jordan |
|
18:22 Comment from : Saylor |
|
Viral genes, bacterial, and fungal genes make up the complex organism called the human being Plants are more advanced because they have incorporated MORE viral/bacterial/fungal genes into their genome sequencing than mammals Meaning they have more ways to morph, adapt, and create defenses against its environment for survival Plants will always survive past the mammals and always will regulate the ecosystem because they have nearly 100 of the ecosystems genes incorporated within its own genome Comment from : Tina Vuchinich |
|
Thank you very much You help make a difficult subject understandable albeit at a elementary level I will keep listening to lectures and each give me a bit more understanding As a retired Electrical Engineer (MIT '60) learning a bit of molecular biology and the coding methods blows my mind Comment from : Michael Neidich |
|
Thank you for the awesome lecture! I'm a PhD student, with chemistry as a background, adventuring myself in the biochemistry field This lecture literally changed my way of understanding the basic concepts! Comment from : Glenda Oliveira |
|
glad that there are professors like this out there, not just pumping out information, but rather taking their time to be sure their students understand the material So patient! Comment from : Jesse Franklin-Peiper |
|
1:15:51 two questions where asked, the first of which was answered as if for both The spirit of the question layed with the second, which was not interpreted by the LecturerbrbrQ1 answer 90 DNA noncodingbrQ2 answer 15 viral artifacts according to the lecture @ 27:50brbrSo the answer is no, she did not get that number correct vs the Lecturer saying yes Comment from : Julio Quinones |
|
Hallo im come from Indonesia, i'm from biologi education of Tidar University Comment from : Linda Timorita Hamzah |
|
How do we get a ‘c’ spike the protein to fold if we don’t know the cause? Comment from : Ant Poo |
|
Excellent presentation which explains complex problems in a simple way The coherence of the whole talk is so good that I enjoyed every second of the talk Thank you! Comment from : Alan Lee |
|
This lecture made my life so much less boring brI worked as a household helper here in Singapore, all the house chores is choking me to death until I become interested into biology Now i can cook, clean and iron so much better while listening to this lecture Comment from : Kokonut Adventure |
|
What a badass lecture Great work, cheers and be well! Comment from : Tyler Marshall |
|
Best lecture ever! Comment from : Yana G |
|
I need vedeo lecture on molecular biology for ecologist Comment from : Tariq Aziz |
|
Thank you so much for sharing! Comment from : Roberta D |
Download An Introduction to Bioinformatics Algorithms (Computational Molecular Biology) PDF РѕС‚ : Jeremy Macias Download Full Episodes | The Most Watched videos of all time |
Biology 1010 Lecture 1 Intro to Biology РѕС‚ : UVUProfessor Download Full Episodes | The Most Watched videos of all time |
gurukula TGT PGT biology methodology classes|Approaches methods and techniques of teaching Biology| РѕС‚ : Bio dolphins Download Full Episodes | The Most Watched videos of all time |
David Sweatt Research Overview Molecular Mechanisms of Learning and Memory РѕС‚ : Vanderbilt University Download Full Episodes | The Most Watched videos of all time |
The Molecular Basis of Memory: Tracking mRNA in Brain Cells in Real Time РѕС‚ : Albert Einstein College of Medicine Download Full Episodes | The Most Watched videos of all time |
Molecular mechanisms of memory updating in young and old mice ▸ Janine Kwapis (Penn State) РѕС‚ : Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics Download Full Episodes | The Most Watched videos of all time |
Jamia B.Ed. Distance Mode 2020 | Jamia B.Ed. 2020 | Jamia Distance Admission 2020 РѕС‚ : Info Venue Download Full Episodes | The Most Watched videos of all time |
Ecology - Key Definitions - GCSE Biology (9-1) РѕС‚ : Mr Exham Biology Download Full Episodes | The Most Watched videos of all time |
What Is A Niche? | Ecology u0026 Environment | Biology | FuseSchool РѕС‚ : FuseSchool - Global Education Download Full Episodes | The Most Watched videos of all time |
Key Ecology Terms | Ecology and Environment | Biology | FuseSchool РѕС‚ : FuseSchool - Global Education Download Full Episodes | The Most Watched videos of all time |