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From DNA to protein - 3D
From DNA to protein - 3D
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18,716,966 views Jan 7, 2015 3D animations
This 3D animation shows how proteins are made in the cell from the information in the DNA code.
To download the subtitles (.srt) for this site, please use the following link: https://goo.gl/Ew7l69 and for more information, please view the video and explore related resources on our site: http://www.yourgenome.org/video/from-...
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Animated by Polymime Animation Company Ltd.
http://www.polymime.com
/ polymimestudio
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@noodlery7034
5 years ago
Visual learning is so much more effective
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106 replies
@theyshareguyliner
7 years ago
Seriously, it took my teacher two weeks to explain us the process from DNA to protein... and it was still Greek to me. Now I get it in less than 3 minutes. Thank you!
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82 replies
@elohel-ys9ck
1 year ago
You guys explained this in 2 minutes and my teacher took 2 weeks to explain. Watching animations really do help!
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4 replies
@gerben7224
5 months ago
Many others have already commented about this, but it is so,so, so much easier to learn these sorts of processes when you're presented with visual information! thank you so much for uploading these!
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2 replies
@jhyland87
4 years ago
It still blows my mind that anyone can figure this stuff out.
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271 replies
@konamiboyfool
3 years ago
I don't know what's more amazing between this stuff or the brain that figured this stuff out.
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71 replies
@User-xp4kl
1 year ago
After studying this topic I can tell that this video is second to none when it comes to explaining how proteins form! Truly a great job!!
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@alikalitovski
5 months ago
The whole process is beyond beautiful I'm in love
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@KO_Manic
2 years ago
I can’t express how much faster I learn when I am presented with a visual sense of what is going on.
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5 replies
@drchriswaltonGammaMindset
3 years ago
The human body is just amazing isn't it. Brilliant video.
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105 replies
@user-dx5sz5ew6v
6 months ago
I read every books just to understanding DNA to protein almost one week, but this 3 minutes videos make me understanding very quickly...Thank You so Much...keep it up for making a lot of videos like this... we always support you
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@BEASTGAMING-dk9te
8 months ago
It's hard to believe that this perfection is because of a bloody blast
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2 replies
@DogeFrom2014
8 years ago
Probably the best video on YouTube about this!
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36 replies
@ethanfawcett4342
4 years ago
Uuuuummm can anyone believe that this is happening while you are reading this.
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18 replies
@readerfocus3158
5 months ago (edited)
Seriously, videos and specifically the Animated videos have just nailed everything. Even you can see death in an animated video
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@MothsAreTheBest
1 year ago
these videos are super helpful! I think a great weakness in trying to learn from lectures in molecular biology is that it's so hard to visualize.
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@eggiiyok7686
2 years ago
This has helped me survived studying genetics and DNA in biology. Even when a year passed, I still remember this
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2 replies
@magdy8171
5 years ago
Watched this back in school and now I am watching it again in the medical school.
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9 replies
@fleur4184
1 year ago
Amazing animation, thank you so much for this educational video. It helps more than any written or oral explanation
"A 3D animation paints a thousand words"
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1 reply
@shreyagupta983
2 days ago
i watched this when i was in school doing alevels and now im prepping for an interview to teach this to an alevel class and this video came up on my suggested! so clear and rlly good!!!
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@kauancorte541
7 years ago
All of this for a sigle protein. Awesomely awesome!
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4 replies
@ThelastProdigy
2 years ago (edited)
This explains in 2 minuts what it took my college professor to explain in 1 and a half hours to explain.
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2 replies
@tulsisexerciseworkouts6307
1 year ago
Amazing video exactly captures what I learnt, and can now show students. Great work! Great attention to detail summarized very clearly :)
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@abhayanand9585
7 months ago
Very beautiful presentation and explanation!
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@jackskellington9570
4 years ago
This is crazy how we are literally programmed
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133 replies
@hadar2805
8 years ago
This video has saved my life before a test last year. Still using it today to refresh my memory. Amazing!
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6 replies
@meology8510
5 months ago
bro this made me tear up, this is literally what we're made of
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@user-dv1nh3xr8l
7 months ago
I thank you from the bottom of my heart
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@mahasiddiqui5100
4 years ago
is it just me or does the lady narrating sound like the person who narrates the safety videos on long flights? just me? alrighty then
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12 replies
@alexanderdushko2158
3 years ago
I never fully understand this in my biology classes (in school). It is so cool to learn this kind of stuff with graphic videos. Thank you!!
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2 replies
@NooriyaZaidi
1 year ago (edited)
Amazing video. Really helped me visualize what I'm learning. Great narration and animation. Thanks.
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@Balljiggler69
6 months ago
We saw this video in class. I had to come back cause my friend kept falling off the damn chair
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@rachelhe609
3 years ago
You’re telling me all this is happening inside me right now?
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75 replies
@manofgod7622
4 years ago
Teacher: teaching 3 weeks some shit
Youtube: ok I’ll do it myself
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8 replies
@Moonlight_Music_YT
1 month ago
Everything in this video was absolutely perfect!! The visuals made studying this so much easier :)
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@micaelaforlano4374
10 months ago
This was especially helpful because there were no breaks in illustration. I've been trying for months to understand this, but the illustrations gave the necessary perspective. My question is: Where does the DNA Polymerase come from? Is there a gene that codes for it?
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@pratibhagoel8770
4 years ago
amazing explanation
a 54 page chapter shrunk in a 2 min video
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1 reply
@arshiaafrin3656
3 years ago (edited)
Hello to my biology class, I know you're watching this
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10 replies
@malakmohammedahmed3169
6 months ago
8 years have passed and it stays the best explanation ever!!
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1 reply
@lawen22
1 year ago
such a concise and simple presentation of information! Needed the visual to make it click, great video!
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1 reply
@libochuan4377
3 years ago
Love how concise and simplified this is, no beating around the bush
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@eee-pv8cj
3 years ago
教科書何回見ても分からんかったのにこれ見たら秒で理解できた3D偉大
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@fivestarmichelin0809
11 months ago
one of the most underrated videos on the internet
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@jaydaparks9498
1 year ago
helping me get through my microbiology course. were learning about DNA Replication and Protein Synthesis within Prokaryotes and Eukaryotes.
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@Galbex21
7 years ago
I studied architecture, and when I see how biology works it just baffles me completely. It just works like it is nothing! Its crazy and amaizing!!
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3 replies
@umamaheswari5978
4 years ago
Now everything looks like a walnut
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1 reply
@mohiniyadav5685
1 year ago (edited)
Thanks I was getting confused and bored when teacher explains this but this was seriously easy. You explain very nicely. Thanks again.
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@aadi4sure
2 months ago
bro this is a boon to thousands of neet students
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@AMIT-sr7fy
4 years ago (edited)
Thanks for those who makes this beautiful animation, soo easy to understand.
Somethings are not understandable in the book, it is understandable only after watching the animation video.
now I fully understood what is the relationship between DNA and chromosome.
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2 replies
@StarContract
3 years ago
How sharp of a brain one must have to be able to observe and formalize all of this
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2 replies
@Malak-uu9qt
1 year ago
Oh my! The animation is amazing I would never understand the whole thing without this video THANKS!!
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@TopStrikerMaverick
2 years ago
My professor couldn’t be this comprehensive in 3 minutes if he bet his desk apple on it
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@katelynnsullivan6424
4 years ago
Where was this literally a week ago when I had a test on it
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7 replies
@laviniafranca3324
2 years ago
The human body is so perfect that makes me cry!!! So beautiful and unbeliavable!!
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7 replies
@immortal_hadez3082
5 months ago
Human body is amazing ,the creation is beautiful
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@pintuswain5132
1 year ago
Thankyou very much . It is so helpful as it helps us to clear the concept with ease . And the animation is just superb .
Just a sincere request to you , to upload such more videos of biology ,which will enable us to grasp the concept . Hope you will definitely help us . Thankyou again ( From India )
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@yashii1311
3 years ago (edited)
Didn’t know my cells do this much work for me everyday :’)
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7 replies
@LudwigvanBeethoven2
3 years ago
And this was just part of a single cell...
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1 reply
@rahmeensajjad
5 months ago
It is amazing and a brilliant way to teach.. Animated videos are the real life saversvery informative!
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@natazer
9 months ago
I feel so bad for people who can't see the intelligent design of a mind blowing creator.
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@vlimans2795
2 years ago
Absolutely beautiful. This channel is my holy grail for biology now.
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1 reply
@leonelasj
5 years ago
Who would unlike this video??? Introns???
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54 replies
@positive_oyee_crazy
7 months ago
Who came here after the link provided on WhatsApp
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@DB-dl8om
2 years ago (edited)
Finally an understandable overview of our DNA. I can swear to god a text which would have been disrtubuted to us during biology lesson wouldn't have given me a shit of knowledge about DNA
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@brid12452
3 years ago
This is just mindblowing... Numbers, mathematics, exactness, coding... It seems so abstract and far away from nature, but it's in fact at the heart of it.
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@anshikabhatt3519
2 years ago
This is really amazing. I read the process of transcription few days before since I am a biology student but I didn't understand it,but after watching this video everything is super clear and you know what I didn't search for this. This is the best recommendation that I got so far from youtube
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@addyifs
3 weeks ago
Thank u so much, i was literally struggling with this in my class. There is no better video on yt than this.
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@divyankgupta8752
2 years ago
This is just too good. Thanks for this video !
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@cherryblossomstreet8802
3 years ago
my bio test is in 5 minutes and I'm reviewing this last minute but my brain is nOT COOPERATING I've watched this 3 times already aaaahahahdhdh
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@christiananthony5161
4 years ago
Congratulations to the team that made this video.The animation provides an easy understanding to a much complex process! (Much better than the schemes in the old books )
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@ibrahimm709
12 days ago
Suffering on this topic since one week and from this video i figured it out in 2 minutes just amazing ,
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@beautyholicmedico372
1 year ago
Seriously i loved it ... actually understood the process
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@dikshasaxena7704
2 years ago
Amazing 3D representation... It cleared the whole image of this process in our mind
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1 reply
@suzannepassero6621
5 years ago
Perfect. Right amount of detail. I suggest keeping CC on while watching.
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@slendermansbestie3168
1 year ago
two min i learned what we have been studying for two months. thank you so much.
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@s4r4h58
2 years ago (edited)
I learn so much better by visual animations, thank you!
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@weatherilt12
3 years ago
Always nice to have it repeated in a different straight forward way with good visuals.
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@sarahjane9517
3 years ago
This is so much more effective than any other explanation. Thank you for putting this out there!
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3 replies
@nonjabulomacu9277
2 years ago
You just successfully summarized a whole lecture slide. Thank you.
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@thundercracker7556
1 year ago
2 weeks and the teacher still can't help me figure this out, then this video with around 2 minutes visualized the concept and boom, get it. BRILLIANT VIDEO
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@mihreteabgirma6351
2 years ago
We need more and more and more videos like this, you changed my life!
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@joebloe1401
4 years ago
Wow — this amazing — I can't believe they deciphered all these complicated interactions!!
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@emirhandundar6039
2 months ago
BUSMEKAylin hocadan geldik en sevdigim hocam
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1 reply
@hadassahpegues5766
1 year ago
This was the best animation on dna to protein that i've ever seen
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@hr3635
3 years ago
이게 젤 깔끔하게 잘 설명해준 영상인듯...
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1 reply
@simonk4174
7 years ago
Thanks. This is much clearer than my biologybook is.
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1 reply
@stmobama3357
5 months ago
OMG in less than 3 mins I can totally understand the mess provided in the textbook! if anyone here's Vietnamese, probably you guys know how "complex" the 12th biology textbook is! thank you so much for this quality video!
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@hebatallahhaggag1671
1 year ago
the definition of AMazinggg & Fascinatinggggg, that's the real GREAT JOB.. Real thank you guys... God bless everyone who contributed to this video !! :)
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@Jonayofsweden
6 years ago
2:33 Thirteen billion years of cosmic evolution aaaaaaaand... PERFECT, a raisin!
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6 replies
@ivvan497
5 years ago (edited)
Man, the more I think about this the crazier it gets. This whole replicating system is so complex that it feels like someone has designed this whole DNA system... Maybe some other species or something. It really does feel like little atom machines or computers. It just baffles my mind how in the end this is just a bunch of atoms, like an steel beam for example.
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@KailashBP
2 years ago
Excellent video! A slight correction. The 5' - 3' mRNA is translated, so the 3' - 5' tRNA binds to the ribosome. So, the growing amino acid chain and the tRNA with the new amino acid is on the 3' side of the tRNA. Your video suggests otherwise.
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@aditichauhan2934
1 year ago
This was literally the best and the easiest explanation . Thankyou.
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@Thipe
2 years ago
everything about this video is the defenition of perfection
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@ArcebabTV
5 years ago
Helped me understant instantly,best video on YouTube about this topic,much love️
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@mun.x0x0
1 year ago
Totally outshine and sharpen my understanding!
This video is a great help, thanks a lot!!
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@anastasiaf1939
3 years ago
whoever made this animation thank you so much god bless you<3
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@emilyruth8450
7 years ago
watching this on acid was a great decision
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7 replies
@Parzival224
9 months ago
Even atoms show that they have intelligence for organizing themselves into molecules such as DNA and replicating themselves for billions of years, unlike many people who use their intelligence to harm others.
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@fluffyres6107
2 weeks ago
These videos are so damn good! In three minutes I understand what a dense textbook cant in 20 minutes!
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@freebooterluckless
3 years ago
Why did I get recommended this I passed Biology forever ago
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1 reply
@rishavkumar1997
3 years ago
What a wonderful animation and explanation , just loves it
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@sondre4413
2 years ago
Fantastic 3D representation.
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@progress-ms3du
2 years ago
Excellent - puts the pieces quite literally in place about where & how mRNA is constructed.
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@ambermay4941
6 years ago
This is one of the most satisfying videos I've ever watched. Visually and cognitively pleasing.
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1 reply
@rebelidsoftware747
6 years ago
Amazing stuff. thank you to whoever made this. This means world to a lot of people. I have started a bioinformatics course on coursera and this type of videos are invaluable!
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@Selahangelique
1 year ago
The fact that our body is so complex strengthens my faith in an intelligent and creative God that made us so unique and detailed.
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@24dasr
7 months ago
Amazing
You explained something in barely 3 minutes, that my botany teacher couldn't in 2 weeks
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@eliasstorhaug535
6 years ago
2:36 - And this is how popcorn is made :D
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1 reply
@ashukaushik9266
3 years ago (edited)
I have studied this all my life being a medico, but learned by heart today! :)
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@rabbit1731
5 months ago
I learned more from this video than the whole school classes
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@loxleymoon
1 year ago
This video is literally perfect.
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@ibraheemjaddou5950
7 years ago
The best video on YouTube about this topic
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@realeyes8199
4 years ago
It surprises me that such things take place at such a small scale.
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2 replies
@bryanryan4504
1 year ago
Amazing. Finally understood this after years of reading textbooks that do absolutely nothing in terms of learning.
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@MuhammadUsman-jo7xj
4 months ago
Seriously this video solved my all curries regarding protein synthesis in just 3minutes
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@begum2079
4 years ago
The best biology teacher in the world OLCAY ASLAN made us watch this animation today . I could already understand in the lesson but now i can imagine how it's going on. Thank you Olcay Aslan for everything. ️
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@halibakda1540
2 years ago
Visual learning is so great and so much more effective. Thank you so much.
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@ilijastankovic6065
7 months ago
Very good video! Thank you so much
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@adnantasin485
1 year ago
One of the best animation in the history of biology.
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@NtWarlock
5 years ago
not the most detailed, but very useful for understanding! Thank you! I used this video (and others) for two exams
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@808BAMFasian
6 years ago
Greatest animation I’ve ever seen for this. Really helped
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@BlueBird-wv7yr
1 year ago
This is absolutely brilliant design
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@somerandomguy1853
10 months ago
Explanations come and go but this will remain the best way to learn!
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@GurshaanGaming
3 years ago (edited)
Coding of DNA : ATGC (adenine, guanine,cytosine,thymine)
Computer Coding : 100001111000101010100101011......
So Interesting to know that Computer programming is made like DNA.
Edit : Now I am in class 12 and got to know another nitrogen base “Uracil” which is found only in RNA instead of Thymine.
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2 replies
@editselixir8070
4 years ago
This really helped me out in understanding the concept
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@yaraelgazzar9588
5 months ago
A video from 8 years helped me a lot in understanding my lesson!
Thanks
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@keshabparajuli8485
1 year ago
brilliant animation to support the content. loved it thank you for this
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@danabeam2437
8 years ago
This is the best video I've seen on this topic.
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@ellend.8849
3 years ago
So well illustrated ! Thank you!
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@ulissesgonzalez58
1 year ago
Great explanation so simple. The way my teacher explained it couldn’t stick this was so helpful
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@jeffclark2675
9 months ago
one of the best, if not THE best, educational videos I have ever seen! BRILLIANTLY done! one cool addition to it would have been, just to provide perspective, would have been a brief summary of how this process fits into the larger biological process...maybe to describe what biological process triggers the need to produce a new protein in the first place? in other words i guess, why is the gene "switched on" in the first place and what switches it on? if anybody knows I would really appreciate an explanation.
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@sujitkarna3137
4 years ago
omg it's so amazing and I understood this easily.Really a picture says hundred words.
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@TheMastertbc
7 years ago
This is just like programming language somehow
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48 replies
@akine6879
3 months ago
Very simple and well explained. Understood right away, thanks!
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@andrewgibbins7409
2 years ago
I have been struggling with this for ages, thankyou for the help
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@shvideos6000
6 years ago
I'm a non-bio student then too I understand what is protein synthesis.. Amazing video
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@crimesacrosstheglobe1885
4 years ago
Best I've seen by far.. great upload, very interesting.
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@SnowInHere
1 year ago
Amazing! Amazing! it's like a miracle we get this altra high quality of information for free. Thanks ever so much!
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@nuggets8573
1 year ago
I’m learning so much from this 3 minute video what would I do without you YourGenome
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@pradnyatate9577
4 years ago
Wow this was amazing. While reading I was so confused but now everything makes sense.
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@naradshrestha69
3 years ago
Biology is soooooo incredibly Beautiful !!
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@abinaya2377
2 years ago
It's easy to understand mind blowing I have confusion in translation but now it's more easy to understand thanks
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@onur9657
1 year ago
Thanks for this brilliant video. This video shows us how great visual learning is.
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@nelsonsoucasaux2751
3 years ago
Excellent video, simple, direct, concise and brilliant ! Congratulations !
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2 replies
@dontletitgo861
5 years ago
Amazing explaination...... my aal doubts about this topic is now clear..
Thanks alot.
Excellent work carry on..
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@Redwan_Ali
3 weeks ago
Hats off to the creator of the video you just saved my exam
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@sarahpurple6547
1 year ago
Thanks a lot for giving us opportunity to see this visually
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2 replies
@ZeraYaqob
3 years ago
I'm very impressed how we are able to figure this out. I'm even more impressed by the one who designed it. This is masterplan in action. We are just observing, taking notes and tweaking things.
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@KELLY2NE1
7 years ago
This video is just what I was looking for! my Bio professor sucks! I don't understand most of his lectures.
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6 replies
@youcuber491
1 month ago
Best animation to understand the function of ribosome. Thanks a lot
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@yoongisminthair5117
2 years ago
Omg this is so effective!! Now it's easier to understand. Thank you!!! <33
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@mukilankannan6220
2 years ago
We had taught this in school today....but after seeing this video it becomes more easy to understand
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@sugumaransasikala8621
6 years ago
its very informative..i can understood the protein synthesis easily
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@yudoball
5 months ago
I wonder how dominant/recessive alleles work on a molecular level.
Like is there an enzyme that deactivates recessive alleles or are the proteins of a dominant allele just produced in larger amounts?
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@tuti3766
1 year ago
Amazing! I'll thank you forever!
I have a teacher that can't explain any information to us he don't know how to make this stuffs easy to us but you did! Thank you really
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@annadiciero
4 years ago
I am in love with this!
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@nevermind9410
3 years ago
Wow this is the best video that explains how we move from DNA to protein
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@ii_8115
1 year ago
Thank you for this video and continue to post such useful videos
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@uzmdrbaverdemir
5 months ago
Amazing video
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@gio3.015
4 years ago
Really clear explenations! I've understood everything the videos said even if i'm italian
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@karolinemyklebust2282
4 years ago
such a good video! It helped me a lot with understanding this stuff, much better than my book. Really good illustrated.
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2 replies
@toiletseatscholar78
3 months ago
Outstanding.
It looks like a well-ordered factory
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@noel3945
9 months ago
ちょうど定期テストの範囲で、参考動画探してたので本当に助かりました
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@benebutterbean2737
3 years ago
This is insane. How do we all not end up as a giant blob of jello?
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@geeeeeeeezzzzzzzzzz
4 years ago
Where's the rest. I was waiting for it to continue but it just ended with a glob of stuff. What happens next? How does this glob go on to form living things?
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9 replies
@faziasultan719
1 year ago
O my GOD! Such an amazing explanation .I can't have to describe this......
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@nellyavila44
1 year ago
This is art. Sending this to my professor now.
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@dazzle_lfe1894
3 years ago
This just made my understanding so much easier!... Thanku fr this visual
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1 reply
@biotriunity
4 years ago
Such a nice clip
It make my concept more strong
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@advaithrvasistha44
3 weeks ago
kudos to the animation team!
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@thermitty_qxr5276
1 year ago
Even doe i dont understand it, its entertaining and fun to watch. I just dont know why we really love this
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@prelyexin
3 years ago
I came yere from turkey and I want to say thank you for this video.Also I dont understand why our teachers dont show like this videos when they want to teach something.
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2 replies
@Emma.916
3 years ago
This 2 minute 42 second video taught me MORE than my school did this year!
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@123xjd3n
1 year ago
The best 2 minute of learning
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@celestewang844
5 years ago
what does the end product look more like:
a) Chicken Nugget
b) Raw Chunk of Ginger
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2 replies
@vladkryptonsalvinorine6715
4 years ago
Those who call themselves a scientist and Cartesian : "Like the universe that appeared randomly after a big explosion, observe this biological process, it's also good luck"
:')
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@henriquehonorato5702
1 year ago
thanks for the video! U DID WHAT NEEDED TO BE DONE
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@aarond402
3 months ago
Thanks to you and the amoeba sisters I might actually pass my biology exam
Reply
@Farsiratorius
4 years ago
So protein is basicaly bunch of amino acids
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65 replies
@aidanbrown156
3 years ago
Why. Was. This. Not. In. My. High School. Bio. Class?!?!?!?! THIS IS SO HELPFUL!
7
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1 reply
@monalisabhattacharyya9900
10 months ago
Wonderful animation and explanation
2
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@aadilking2413
2 years ago
Animation are really really helpful.
When my teacher explains this central dogma, my god I don't understand a thing, but this video makes this process to understand very easily. Thanku
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@prizeudo3393
7 years ago (edited)
This is seriously the BEST video out there that explains this process and shows an appropriate illustration. Thank you for not inserting all the useless banter that most videos put it to try and make it more interesting, but usually end up mucking up the information... High School biology Thanks you....
5
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yourgenome
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2 replies
@patrickkoller901
3 years ago
Who is here because of home schooling, too?
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9 replies
@DucMinhTeaching
1 year ago
Thank you, this video is a gem
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@cerenoztan606
2 years ago
Love the video. İ was reading a book about dna transcription but it didn't make sense until this video showed up at my main page .Thank u for the effort
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1 reply
@wesley.leonardo
8 years ago
A awesome animation! This helps a lot in school! Thx!
3
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@Zeppelinpuppy
6 years ago
Outstanding explanation, thank you so much
16
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@payelbhattacharjee7396
7 months ago
Thanks for this video
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@nvm9814
1 month ago
THIS HELPED ME SSOOOOOOO MUCH OMG
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@D_kiki999
3 years ago
Wow....this video made DNA replication so easy to understand...thanks and hail to whoever made this video
4
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1 reply
@mollyyu1767
3 years ago
I watched this video a yr ago when I just started learning biology on my own, now a yr passed I can finally understand(briefly) what it means!!!
5
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@palaksharma5082
1 year ago
I love it ️
Easy to understand and learn️
2
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@ajlucky0076
5 months ago
This is how you know the education system is broken when a 3 minute video teaches me more than weeks of classes
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@NoogahOogah
3 years ago
This makes me humble, and grateful to be alive.
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@simriti3280
3 years ago
Crystal clear animation.. Cleared all the doubts.. Thanks
3
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1 reply
@dindosepehortel3637
1 year ago
it amazed me that a subject for one semester can be summarized in less than 3 minutes.
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@marchenkoorest8947
2 years ago
Thank you so much for this video! This video is so cool ! I wish you big success!
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@titanhere7009
1 year ago
Probably the best method....I have spent a lot of time to study genetics from books but I was unable to understand it well but today this video got recommended and this helped me to understand it in just 2 min
...thanks YouTube
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@arthurzhang8759
11 months ago
amazing amazing video in such a succinct way showing us the complex process! Please keep the great work! The world, The youtube needs such high quality videos!
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@unconventionaldonut6885
7 years ago
This helped me understand!
3
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@HuzaifaYusuf
5 years ago
Omg I am lost in class however after your video , I fell clued on
3
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@farahrauf9069
4 weeks ago
Literally, i was weeping because i could not understand this topic, but now it is very easy for me, It is piece of cake! Love from pakistan🇵🇰
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@Duk_gwon
2 years ago
수업 때도 많이 봤다고 …. 굣수님 생각나게 해주네 우리 알고리즘 ……..
1
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@kavitarawal3425
4 years ago
That really helped me in my understanding towards this , thank you!!
4
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@isabelasantos6026
3 years ago
que vídeo lindo, estou apaixonada
6
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@lovelystar0225
11 months ago
just what i needed! thank you
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@claracaporali9850
1 year ago
absolutely amazing
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@siddharthr1853
3 years ago
I really want to understand how do they figure this out? Do they watch everything inside a cell via an electron microscope or is it just dipping the cell in one chemical and inferring the result to be something because the chemical change in a certain way?
5
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@anikasumby6620
2 years ago
Thank you! this is saving me as a visual learner in biology.
5
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@gcardoso
2 years ago (edited)
The transcription of DNA into protein is amazing! How all those complex relationships and interactions happened by chance in the first living cell is still a big mystery to science. DNA is essentially information and to believe that information was created by chance its a blunder, IMHO.
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4 replies
@userkosheirnnck
2 months ago
You saved my life !
God bless you
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@lowenzahn3976
4 years ago (edited)
I have questions.
> "When a gene is switched on ..."
What switches it on, how, and when?
> "Before the mRNA can be used ... it needs to be processed"
Why? Why can it not be ready to use as it is? It seems like an unnecessary step. And what removes and adds these sections based on what information?
> "The messenger RNA then moves out of the nucleus into the cytoplasm"
How does the messenger RNA know that it has to move and where it has to move?
> "Once the last amino acid has been added the chain folds"
Why does the chain only fold once the last amino acid has been added and not before?
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3 replies
@vishalmishra4081
5 years ago
I asked the teacher times ,but he ran away from my question but I get it
10
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@bernardosales14
4 months ago
Thanks for the great video!
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@stefnisuhani367
6 months ago
Very ckear and understandable
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@usery.
4 years ago
映像がめっちゃわかりやすい!
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@heloisaossboll1576
6 years ago
Oh my god. I LOVE this!!! Nature is AMAZING.
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6 replies
@tejasmonteiro2704
3 months ago
Wow this 3 min vid is more effective than a hour lecture
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@theunique880
2 years ago
The last step is superb
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@TheAIEpiphany
3 years ago
Amazing! So basically a Ribosome is like a cook in the kitchen, it reads the recipe (encoded in the mRNA) and combines the ingredients (amino acids) that are carried by tRNA to the kitchen. Out comes the main-dish - the proteins! AlphaFold2 brought me here <3
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1 reply
@sangeetha-do5lm
3 years ago
Don't know y this video has so many dislikes.... Anyways u guys always make my learning much much easier
3
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@abrahamjolayemi8811
2 months ago
Such an illustrative animation video. Simply great! Can you add the transcription, please? Thanks.
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@ahmedalmosewy7606
1 year ago
This is masterpiece ،thanks god i found this video
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@lovemoviesmoviefun3608
7 years ago
Very good video. The images showing how the protein is created help us a lot to guess how it works in real life... I wish you guys had this video in portuguese (Brazil) because many friends of mine they don't speak english :( Thank you for sharing!!!
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yourgenome
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6 replies
@aizakhan9231
4 years ago
plz make a video on bio Technology process in 3D form
4
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@razablanco3766
1 year ago
It was explained so well, but I still cannot imagine this going through a body.
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@samankhan5691
1 year ago
Human body never ceases to amaze us!!woah
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@tensai_genius_sora
1 year ago
生物で習って点と点だった内容だけどこの動画で点と点がつながって流れがわかるようになった!!わかりやすい!
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1 reply
@MusicIsLife-cd1xd
5 years ago
Wtf I got everything in 2 minutes,but I was trying to get it for 2 weeks before this video.
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1 reply
@samankhan5691
1 year ago
Human body never ceases to amaze us!!woah
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@peternicholsonu6090
2 years ago
I see this as brilliant programming by a brilliant mind. Please don’t anyone ever again tell me it developed all by itself over however millions of years or I’ll introduce you to a mathematician.
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2 replies
@barhat961
2 years ago
lmao. why protein was looking like a popcorn.
3
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@mochimoy8865
3 years ago
This happen in my body everytime.it looks like a factory btw
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@creativeworld1641
2 years ago
Thankyou so much for make this
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@SukhvinderSingh-jz4ff
1 year ago
The HIGHEST INTELLIGENCE which we haven't understood so far.
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@snip-sniptear956
4 years ago
Here is my Short Summary:
1. mRNA and Ribosome meet in Cytoplasm of a cell
2. Ribosome binds "clamp" to the strand of RNA and codes the strand with a tRNA holding an amino acid, and generates a chain of amino acids called a protein
3. The finished amino acid chain is free and folds into a 3-D structure "tertiary" called a polypeptide.
The End
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@hemlataborate9865
4 years ago
I love to learn with animation. It understand better than the usual teaching. It is the easiest way to learn biology and keep it in mind for forever.
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@andrewthomas2353
1 year ago
Great, clear and simple
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@chandithasilva8550
1 year ago
Thank you very much, learned a lot
1
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@joncarlovariety
4 years ago
Why am I watching this at 1 AM?
Good question
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19 replies
@zareenhossain4292
3 years ago
This is truly the most beautiful thing I've seen today
4
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@claraaphm
3 weeks ago
Thank you for helping me not fail my science quiz
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@luiza_pp03
1 year ago
that's really amazing
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@irfankhan873
4 years ago
Cleared my confusion...
3
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@yeon_ju__chinzz
3 years ago
설명 잘 된 영상
4
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@NM002
1 year ago
This is the best method of understanding the things very properly..... Thanku so much .... your video was amazing ....it clears my concept
1
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@baborsregime9922
1 year ago
This video deserves a reward
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@VARS-er8xc
4 years ago
Our human body is more complex than the supercomputers.
.
.
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3 replies
@kardeslerozelkan3285
4 years ago
çok iyi bir video olmuş bu konuyu anlamama çok yardımcı oldu teşekkürler
thanks for this video it helped to me that understood my lesson.
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@SaguaroSkyRoofing
13 days ago
Human body is amazing ,the creation is beautiful
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@Amatallah134
10 days ago
سبحان الخالق المبدع بجد سبحانه على حكتمه في خلقه والدقه ياربي سبحاانك
الأحياء هي اكتر ماده تخليك تتأمل خلق الله علشان كده بحبها ️
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@ten5_5
4 years ago
先生に言われて見に来た国際生とか居たりしないよね
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@escaperhanmin972
3 years ago
Hey sir, can I use some parts of this video for my middle school presentation?
5
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@championfifamobile7673
2 years ago
This video taught me what an hour of lecture couldn't
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@marcellovicario5738
1 year ago
YOU SAVED MY LIFE!!
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@brenyboy26
4 years ago
nice.
im still straight up failing my exam tho
4
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@AB-js5uv
6 years ago
wow this video took less that 3 minutes to explain a process i have been trying to understand for weeks, i knew all the terms but putting it all together confused me.
3
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@filmysafer4424
2 years ago
Wow, what a process
1
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@dustinmartin653
2 days ago
It’s like a machine blueprint. It’s more proof we are created beings.
1
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@haunal3868
2 years ago
Güzel bir anlatım olmuş
WATCHİNG FROM TURKEY
4
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@klemesonlucas8399
3 years ago
Eu aqui, em plena pandemia, de quarentena, com professores passando trabalhos à mil, e minha professora ainda me envia um link de vídeo EM INGLÊS pra fzr resumo.
pS.: Ela é de biologia
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1 reply
@ceylianneau8257
2 months ago
Its incredible
1
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@anassheikh9727
2 years ago
practical vision builds good concepts
such an amazing video ....
1
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@arpanbabai9313
5 years ago
Nice....plz share splicing process
3
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@bekooo4127
3 years ago
OMGGG!!! This is really Good something
8
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@judithdegroot990
6 months ago
how did the first enzyme come to life? as an enzyme is needed for the production of enzymes?
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@minasedition
1 year ago
thank you so much omg i shouldve discovered this video earlier so i didnt have to lose my mind from trying to understand this stuff on my own
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1 reply
@davis9502
3 years ago
This is so complex and it's such a fashion that this cannot have evolved through random chance it just can't. Even through millions of years it'd be failing constantly.
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2 replies
@sondosnasser9738
3 years ago
This is so helpful, tbh teachers just need to put these types of videos on and we’ll learn.
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@user-yp2lr6wq5p
9 months ago
thank you so much!! it helped me a lot
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@Queen-dz4ws
2 years ago
This is a brilliant video
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@linakawaii9557
4 years ago
علاوة على ان هذا الفيديو ساعدني في دراستي انه يبين كذلك عظمة وقوة الله عز وجل
لا اله الا الله
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1 reply
@chris11420
4 years ago
Good explanation
At least good from my teacher
3
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@mdsagormia1969
2 years ago
This is so much helpful
1
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@ffjjj2911
2 years ago
Thank Youu that was simple but on spot
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@user-yx4lu8xi6q
4 years ago
Hey i'm 15 years old from the republic of Korea
Today i studied this whole process at the private school...
Driving me nuts
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3 replies
@iamdshiva1388
3 years ago
who understood it now, after confusing a lot!! hit like
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@esilemsr4074
2 years ago
Thank you for this
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@Abdullahkhan___2005
5 months ago
Visual learning is Amazing .
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@yassmin7301
18 hours ago
طالبة سادس جاية من محاظرة سالم ال منصور
5
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@monkeybrain1968
7 years ago
What was first? DNA or protein?
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yourgenome
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25 replies
@Martami169
1 year ago
There is a mistake in this movie, transfer RNA needs to be more pressed to reach its third shape, then it can carry aa and deliver it in ribosome.
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@fsh3702
2 months ago
thanks, very concise and clear
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@phillip2893
5 years ago
Great video, just like to point out that 1:06, there are two T's opposite each other (ik im being picky, im sorry)
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1 reply
@user-kl1ly3po2e
3 years ago
شرح رائع شكرا جزيلا
3
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@yogendrakesharwani3650
2 years ago
Nice explanation with extraordinary animation
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@WardaZainab14
7 months ago
Wonderful
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@deanmoncaster
4 years ago
I watched that and now remember none of it
3
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@bhavyapanwar1273
3 years ago
2:35 I can't be the only one who thought of Walnut.
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1 reply
@PRA1503
1 year ago
Thank you its too useful for easy understanding
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@hememez5545
2 years ago
Cameraman did a good job
1
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@kalsoomashfaq7920
4 years ago
Yup ......it is a very useful video and it helped much for a veryy good imagination about central dogma
Thanks a lot
Allah bless u
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@user-wb6xl1wr4d
3 years ago
thank u my god for all this blessings for free
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@ali1360ful
4 months ago
Wonderful and amazing. Thank you for this video
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@khushboosharma9953
11 months ago
thanks , T H A N K S, from the bottom of my heart.
helped me so much.
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@emran7067
3 years ago
sayende konuyu öğrendim
adamsın <3
9
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4 replies
@rian192
3 years ago
1:22 nessa parte os "introns" saem da fita de RNAm
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1 reply
@VikasVerma-iy2xx
2 years ago
Thank you very much. Literally this video clear my doubts regarding protein
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@amelie1001
1 year ago
this video just saved my life
Reply
@praveenrai4382
3 years ago
It was really amazing ! All things are cleared perfectly
5
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1 reply
@sarasousa4949
2 years ago
quem também veio pela questão da OBBS?
2
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@tejaswaguptacreativeart4760
2 years ago
Awesome explanation
1
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@MuhammadUsman-op5us
1 year ago
well I cannot express in Worls the service you have providen
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@zeynepulu9334
3 years ago
Why some parts of the rna are being deleted?
3
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2 replies
@thetruthfulchannel6348
8 years ago
Video is very useful but seems a little overly simplified.
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1 reply
@cheriemaemendoza1545
2 years ago
It's easy to understand stand within a minute but a also spend me hour..to understand this lesson..thank you so much and God bless
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@user-ig2pr8yr5f
8 months ago
nice representation of the body
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@bluezombie34
4 years ago
Dislikes are from bacteria’s
5
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1 reply
@user-cq7ir1sx2y
1 day ago
منو اجى من محاضره سالم ال منصور
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8 replies
@user-hq2ig4ls3l
6 months ago
Why at minute 2:10 the string continues to be translated if there is a UAG combination, which indicates a stop signal?
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1 reply
@vivekgawali5935
11 months ago
Brilliant
Visual Learning Is Just The Thing
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@joshuazhang1868
4 years ago
Ey where's my Poly-A tail, SNRNPS, and Exons/Introns?
3
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2 replies
@wafaahusam5461
4 years ago
"وفي أنفسكم أفلا تُبصرون"
سبحانك ربي ما أعظمك
3
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@asmaaaskar1717
1 year ago (edited)
Thank you so much for the explanation mam. It made me much easier to understand
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@user-ho4ed8xj5q
4 months ago
thnks for this vedio it discribe lots of things in few minutes and i can catch it easily....
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@user-zo7wg8mo9r
3 years ago
RNA: is being modificated
Meanwhile: "sad intron noises"
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@ntarar2065
7 years ago
I am from Iraq and this help me so much thx guys
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5 replies
@simonholmj
2 years ago
Very good and informational video!
-stole this for my school project
1
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@meya6565
8 months ago
so cool. I was afraid of genetic but now I don't feel like that. awesome.
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@suvarnachavan5124
5 years ago
Best Video for 10 std NEW Syallubus
3
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@busraamasyal9817
3 years ago
Çok öğretici
4
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1 reply
@mika9027
5 months ago
Wow! It's amazing.
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@tantowijauhari9056
1 year ago
Subhanallah, Maha Besar Allah yang telah menciptakan setiap detil proses sel ini dengan rapi dan seimbang
Reply
@Alhamdlilah.
3 years ago
عن أبي هريرة - رضي الله عنه - قال: قال رسول الله - صلى الله عليه وسلم -: (كلمتان خفيفتان على اللسان، ثقيلتان في الميزان، حبيبتان إلى الرحمن: سبحان الله وبحمده، سبحان الله العظيم)؛ متفق عليه.
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11 replies
@stevenseagal4987
4 years ago
My body does this constantly because I’m so swole
5
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@gg_knowledge
2 years ago
Thank you for the beautiful video helped me a lot.
2
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@user-lk1wp2je4q
7 months ago
Best Animation
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@MrDOnutDrake
8 years ago
How does RNA travel from one point to another
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yourgenome
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17 replies
@gyrus3295
6 years ago
سبحان الله
151
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23 replies
@livebiochemistry
1 year ago
Excellent video
1
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@statusshorts2310
7 months ago
It is very easy to understand
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@ahmadamin4835
6 days ago
وين طلاب السادس
4
Reply
1 reply
@ilayda2766
10 months ago
Barış hocadan gelenler
4
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@yeasinArafat-mh6il
3 months ago
Never gonna forget it.. thanks
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@Scificlip
7 days ago
Amazing video!
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@Medicalguy
5 years ago
central dogma my dudes
4
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@neztesla8926
3 years ago
Fundamentals biyoloji izleyicilerine selam :)
4
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1 reply
@esraaashraf5607
1 year ago
wow this is great
1
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@sravasaksitam
1 year ago
This is amazing
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@StephenCClark
2 months ago
And they say there is no God.
4
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2 replies
@kicsiqki
3 years ago
I wish people who claim mRNA vaccines change DNA watched this video...
3
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1 reply
@hayleydunn8119
2 years ago
THANK U THANK U HELPED A LOT
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@mervedemir7
2 years ago
pov: you are in biology class and teacher is so excited for this video
1
Reply
@YassinWael
2 years ago
تالته ثانوي: react sad
7
Reply
1 reply
@ykscalsyorum2890
2 years ago
Allah'ın hikmetine bak, ağzım açık izledim. Harikaa...
4
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@sciencenerd7639
1 year ago
I like the animation!
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@retardatarioprimordial2222
7 months ago
I dont understand nothing about english, but this video magically saved me of the certain death.
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@Ayman-mt5sy
4 years ago
1:15 صل الله عليه وسلم
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1 reply
@yas-sinesl9105
3 years ago
Atheists be like :
C O I N C I D E N C E
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4 replies
@KhanKakar-be4dy
11 months ago
Your teaching increase my learning ability
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@winterwitch8914
2 years ago
This is unbelievable helpful
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@drd6482
1 year ago
COOKIES #hammybears #howmanybears #acid #twomillionpoints #pointstoslytherin #yeahboi
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1 reply
@indianyoutuber2036
4 years ago
1:53 India 🇮🇳
3
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1 reply
@nhipham6170
6 months ago
amazing
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@highschool168
8 months ago
Very nice
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@amatallah81
4 months ago
سبحان الله العظيم
5
Reply
2 replies
@user-fe3gl7sf7l
3 days ago
طلاب تالتة ثانوى 2024
3
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@user-do9yf8nm1q
3 months ago
How complicated is the human body marvellous !
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@PauL-ft6jv
3 months ago
HOW can it be so perfect from start to beginning ?
Reply
@user-lm6nu4do3e
2 years ago
مفيش حد عربى هنا ولا اى كل الكومنتات أجانب أين انتم يا عرب️️️
3
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2 replies
@Levi-nr2oz
5 years ago
اهه كفو انقذتيني
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1 reply
@user-ok4jq4dm2c
2 months ago
thanks that is really helpful
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@wsqheift6488
1 year ago
wonderful video, i understood everything, thanks!!!
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@2fast2block
4 years ago
Praise God for His amazing designs that give us life.
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1 reply
@Matt-ql1cj
3 years ago
This is the nth overwhelming proof that God is there. Tell me now how a casual explosion could have created such an extraordinary precise mechanism like this
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3 replies
@DragonBane299
2 years ago
This video saved me 30 mins of brain dead reading and lost memorisation
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@roshnimaheshwari8553
1 year ago
It's too good... it's really helps in this topic..
1
Reply
@a-ki-mm
2 years ago
Hi 12D
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7 replies
@salm2135
4 years ago
Not possible to deny God after watching this.
4
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@dakshrajpurohit2885
1 year ago
Wow!!!!!!
Next level explanation.....
Gr8
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@knightimab
5 days ago
Note -> It is a eukaryotic cell, not a prokaryote.
1
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@aliexsimth4980
5 years ago
Where goes mRNA capping?
3
Reply
1 reply
@karlitaa6482
1 year ago
Como le digo a mi maestra de ciencias que no c inglés
3
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1 reply
@muhammadsarfraz5159
1 year ago
Wonderfully video
2
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@saim568
2 years ago
Love this video...outstanding
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@yadavdurga5019
1 year ago
Jesus Christ bless you all of you
3
Reply
@user-id4xh4sm7d
3 years ago
مين جاي تالته ثانوي
3
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3 replies
@shubhamverma2106
2 years ago
very beautiful, joyful learning. May World bless you.
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@mr.johnzussino6217
1 year ago
Great video - thanks:)
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@HamishaHamisha
5 years ago
"يَا أَيُّهَا الْإِنسَانُ مَا غَرَّكَ بِرَبِّكَ الْكَرِيمِ" O Man! What has made you careless about your Lord, the Most Generous?
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2 replies
@habibarr19
21 hours ago
ايدا هو مفيش مصريين لي هنا
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1 reply
@ishansharma1475
1 year ago
What an excellent video
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@rz8967
1 year ago
this is the beat learning video i ever watched
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@coeurderockeur871
4 years ago
Only GOD is able to write this code.
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@vidyagaikwad7629
8 years ago
it is ribosome not mRNA which moves in translation. ribosome moves along the mRNA in stepwise manner.
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9 replies
@shreyagupta983
2 days ago
clearest video ever
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@brunosolano9801
2 years ago
Goated animation
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@leeamraa
4 years ago (edited)
Facts with stunning complexity and intelligence like this one give atheists nightmares.
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@sanbaali
4 years ago
All that from ALLAH "God" سبحانه وتعالى.
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@nils567
4 months ago
superbe vidéo merci
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@user-um8mk6rc7y
4 months ago
Thank you very much
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@ZainAhmed-mf1sr
9 months ago
Amazing animation
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@dyin7889
1 year ago
This was very helpful tysm
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@MangoWifi831
4 months ago
OMG IT ALL MADE SENSE NOW. Time to throw my useless textbook out the window
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@sakshipriya9055
3 months ago
Thank you so much ma'am
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@NoorAlhudaChassibOglahKh-xy4hg
10 months ago
Excellent work
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@wasiqahmad1001
1 year ago
Oh man,damnnnn!!what a explanation!really appreciative!
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@maryamdebbba4739
1 year ago
Thank you so much
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@batatinhaxd77
9 months ago
Omg what a beautiffil explanation thank uuu <3
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@MysticDragon-io2gh
1 year ago
WOW!!!! This helped me soooo much! Thx a lot!!!!!
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@doaamohamed92
10 months ago
Really helpful
Thanks!
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@nicolebazanasmat6847
1 year ago
THE BEST VIDEO EVER
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@arushiscreativethings8302
1 year ago
Thank u to explain the process of DNA️
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@its.eya111
1 year ago
thank you so much for explaining that to me
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@vartikachand6927
1 year ago
Brilliant video
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@estudiantedemedicina4874
2 years ago
Hey, good video
A new suscrition from mexico
Thank you for the video.
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@tasmiatarannum8382
1 year ago
This channel is lit
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@emy_studies
2 years ago
Perfect ️ Thanks!
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@Roza-adnan
1 year ago
I think this video is enough to learning about this subject
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@rikstoyandactivityzone5669
10 months ago
Excellent video.
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@smitpatel8240
8 months ago
Thank you so much for this video I understand very easily..... thank you so much...
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@jakeh2049
2 years ago
The fact that random atoms form chemicals, which in turn form molecules that wind up doing this is mind blowing, when you REALLY think about it. The fact that consciousness then somehow emerges from that.. not really sure what to think
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1 reply
@Smart_Chick_
1 year ago
Great video
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@alexandrudanielmartinas3615
1 year ago (edited)
Thank you,good video
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@schoolstudy513
1 year ago
A master piece
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@dikshita8950
1 year ago
Thank you so much ️️
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@mac.1315
1 year ago
Ohh I cant belive it is that easy to understand 3D..
..because in class i didnt get anything
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@Abstract.x
1 year ago
Explained really well good job! This makes me believe there is intelligence behind this intricate design and I call that supreme intelligence God.
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@sandyaraghu6623
2 years ago
I feel very easy, clear and I received maximum info.. within 3min.tq..very much vdo maker..
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@lungiswasnenhlahla4968
1 year ago
I did'nt understand this process before but now i do understand it
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@tobiaspiyobol4184
1 year ago
If this were Tinder I would superlike this video. Fantasticly done!
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@ComparisonKing44
1 month ago
I understood more with this video in 2 minutes than 2 months at school
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@zarrkez
1 year ago
Best explaination ever
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@NanCy-ug5ig
1 year ago
شكرا لكي علي هذا الفيديو والترجمه للعربيه ساعدني جدا خلال دراستي للصف الاخير في الثانوي ️
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@sanmiodeyemi7385
2 years ago
Very apt and clear.
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@user-dj5cf2qx5l
6 months ago
Life is so magical
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@krishnia
1 year ago
Very much effective video I learnt it in two minutes
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@anjanaraveendran551
1 year ago
thank you so much for video
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@CtfOmer
2 years ago
thank you so much
1
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@murugavelv8433
2 years ago
Excellent video
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@tnt_yy2ww
1 year ago
This is so helpful
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@swatiahuja8136
5 months ago
Awesome
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@adityaupadhyay8148
1 year ago
Thank you so much ️
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@nourdey3007
1 year ago
can't thank you enough!
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@lakkhidevi4802
1 year ago
Thank u so much for this 3d video .......
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@MaatsMerkaba
1 year ago
Oh my god this helped so much
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@ShahriarAbir-sj3ev
10 months ago
This type of videos are so effective.
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@linaafef4315
6 months ago
شوفوا الراحه بعد قراءة هذا الدعاء
اللهم لا تشمت اعدائي بدائي ۞ واجعل القرآن العظيم دوائي وشفائي ۞ انت ثقتي ورجائي ۞واجعل حسن ظني بك شفائي ۞ اللهم ثبت علي عقلي وديني ۞ وبك يا رب ثبت لي يقيني ۞ وارزقني رزقاً حلالاً يكفيني ۞ وابعد عني شر من يؤذيني ۞ ولا تحوجني لطبيب يداويني ۞ اللهم استرني على وجه الارض ۞ اللهم ارحمني في بطن الارض ۞ اللهم اغفرلي يوم العرض عليك ۞ بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم طريقي ۞ والرحمن رفيقي ۞والرحيم يحرسني ۞ من كل شيء يلمسني ۞اللهم اعوذ بك من شر النفاثات في العقد ۞ ومن شر حاسد اذا حسد ۞ اللهم اني عبدك ابن عبدك ۞ ابن امتك ناصيتي بيدك ماض في حكمك ۞ عدل في قضاؤك ۞ اسالك بكل اسم هو لك سميت به نفسك ۞ أو أنزلته في كتابك ۞ أو علمته أحداً من خلقك ۞ او استاثرت به في علم الغيب عندك ۞ أن تجعل القرآن ربيع قلبي ۞ ونور صدري وجلاء حزني وذهاب همي ۞ اللهم يا مسهل الشديد و ياملين الحديد و يامنجز الوعيد ۞ و يا من هو كل يوم في امر جديد ۞ اخرجني من حلق الضيق الى اوسع الطريق ۞ بك ادفع ما لا اطيق ۞ ولا حول ولا قوة الا بالله العلي العظيم ۞اسالك اللهم بقدرتك التي حفظت بها يونس في بطن الحوت ۞ ورحمتك التي شفيت بها ايوب بعد الابتلاء ۞ ان لاتبق لي هما ولاحزنا ۞ ولاضيقا ولاسقما الا فرجته ۞ وان اصبحت بحزن فامسيني بفرح ۞ و ان نمت على ضيق فايقظني على فرج ۞ وان كنت بحاجه فلا تكلني إلى سواك ۞ وان تحفظني لمن يحبني وتحفظلي احبتي ۞ اللهم انك لا تحمل نفساً فوق طاقتها ۞ فلا تحملني من كرب الحياة مالا طاقة لي به ۞ وباعد بيني وبين مصائب الدنيا ۞ وتقلب حوادثها كما باعدت بين المشرق والمغرب ۞ اللهم بشرني بالخير ۞ كما بشرت يعقوب بيوسف ۞ وبشرني بالفرح كما بشرت زكريا بيحيى ۞اللهم آآمـيـــن۞
يارب شافي وعافي وأكرم وارزق واستر سترا جميلا في الدنيا والآخرة وفرج هم وغم ناشر وناقل هذا الدعاء وارزقه فرحة تجعله يسجد باكيا اللهم لا تمضي ليلة اليوم الا وانت فرجت كربه و يسرت امره واستجبت دعائه بفضلك يا ارحم الراحمين اللهم في هذا اليوم ارزقه ما يتمنى يااااارب اجبره جبرا يتعجب منه اهل السموات والأرض
يَارَبِّ فَرَجَ هَمَّ مَنْ يَنْشُرُه فًي ِ10مِجُمٌوٌعِات
(( أَلاَ بِـــــــــذِكْـــرِ اللَّهِ تَطْـــمَــــئِنُّ الْـــقُـــلُـــوبُ
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@namratapatel8916
9 months ago
This video is very helpful for me
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@nausherwanhumayun9757
2 years ago
Awesome Video....
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@colinenonnon1949
2 years ago
I just get my mind completely blown
What could be the power of calculation of a whole body?
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@Blakeandnadia
1 year ago
This is awesome
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@user-nw4mv7sx2j
1 year ago
Awesome!!! God bless you ️
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@Wedaani
6 months ago (edited)
Alleh says in the holy quran :
- (هذا خلق الله )
- (وفي أنفسكم أفلا تبصرون)
- (الذي أحسن كل شي خلقه)
- (لقد خلقنا الإنسان في أحسن تقويم)
سُبحـان الله
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@DaveEntity
1 year ago
How in the world do Organelles even know what to do. What's programming them and causing them to carry out these exact instructions. So crazy
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@elemhirsi9943
6 months ago
Thank youuu
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@siddharthajaiprakash
1 year ago
very cool animation
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@shamandhandev1556
1 year ago
such a genius explainer THUMBS UP FOR HERO OF BIOLOGY STUDENTS ..........
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@golamrosulsuchi6730
1 year ago
very effective thanks
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@nimetpolat4190
1 day ago
Allahım sen ne muhteşem yaratmışsın
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@nadeemkhannadeemkhan2236
8 months ago
Very inpressive explanation
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@user-nw4tk8gb9n
1 year ago
0:40 Who is this genius who put these instructions?
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@mhizfavy1246
1 month ago
Omg this is powerful
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@user-rn8hf3dc5l
1 year ago
Очень круто! Спасибо!)
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@Frxd0
2 years ago
Very good, thanks
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@joelalain
1 year ago
that is completely crazy
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@pragya_rao
1 year ago
The amount of fascination and respect I develop for mother nature and almighty Shree Krishna when I see something like this is unimaginable. And to be lucky enough to learn it.. thats the beauty of biology
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@aitbargul5446
1 year ago
I like this types of learning
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@chineloblessing6606
1 year ago
Good job!
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@nsrnhssn1899
7 months ago
The power of technology
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@pirinthanpirinthan8993
1 year ago
Its very useful thank you
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@user-dr6ho5rp5g
2 years ago
And you go and say that the universe was created by chance, so they asked about how these things were used in this precise order and with this genius
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2 replies
@OppoA-xv6mi
1 year ago
Woah... Amazing
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@dhirdeepakmichael2977
1 year ago
just watching it once made me clear about translation.
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@fffarzana7259
1 year ago
Wow, amazing
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@itischeesy
1 year ago
thank you so much
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@sooyaluvr
9 days ago (edited)
genes contain the instruction for making proteins
when the gene is switched on, RNA polymerase attaches to the start of the gene
RNA polymerase moves along the DNA to make a strand of mRNA out of free bases in the nucleus
DNA code determines the order in which free bases are added to the mRNA (process: Transcription)
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@VishalKumar-dl5rs
1 year ago
How can such deadly video's are unnoticed by students !
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1 reply
@sofee23
1 year ago
Thank you very much
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@sakhubaikurhade7959
1 year ago
Thank you
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@manishachauhan8217
2 years ago
Excillent maam thanku so much
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@lavkushsingh1842
1 year ago
Wonderful explanation Maam
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@StormDiper
2 years ago
Welcome to another episode of “how will this help me in the future”
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@youcefboukhari1975
1 month ago
ربي يحفظك ياااااا أستاذة نحبك بزاف
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@sumitsingh4464
2 years ago
At 2:08 The mRNA will not move after attaches to smallar subunit i.e 30 s of ribosome...
Ribosome will moves as translation proceeds and finally amino acid exit from 'E'site
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@isshekabiswas7301
1 year ago
Thank you best video ... great learning
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@sofijastarcevic4254
1 year ago
Thank you so much
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@amrgames2663
1 year ago
This video is great and very useful
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@naughtynoor7308
1 year ago
Great video
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@Rami-bi9xj
1 year ago
THANK YOU !!!
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@pascalmuhamadfauzan2572
1 year ago
Brilliant video
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@user-ts6xq6qw3i
2 years ago
Очень и очень понятно. Спасибо. Отличный материал.
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1 reply
@theprincesskarma31
1 year ago (edited)
30 dakikadır çalıştığım konuyu 3 dakikada anladım mükemmel
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@sarojinisahoo2087
1 year ago
Amazing video
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@pohovanavanila
1 year ago (edited)
This video explained this in 3 minutes, while biology teachers can't in 2 weeks
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@user-zr2gb6ts2r
7 months ago
Wah thanks y so much
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@asmo8312
1 year ago
Perfect keep going
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@MuhammadShoaib-eg1pd
2 years ago
Intelligent design
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@uiltonsilva7842
2 years ago
Maravilha, amazing; leigos como eu nunca tivemos informaçãoes tão esclarecedoras, graças a evolulão da TI que hoje nos permite acesso a qualquer informação apenas com um simples clique do mouse.
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@tilda2182
1 year ago
new to this evolution thing when does the mammoth come in the picture?!
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@FutureDoctor790
2 years ago
A lots of thanks
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@Sayd_ashti
1 year ago
Well done
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@riverbetg
2 years ago
I watched this video in biology class. Coincidence that it’s been recommended. I actually saw it yesterday, so weird. Fun fact: while watching this in class, someone mooned the class and had to leave.
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@karl323
1 year ago
Amazing what can evolve ....given enough time
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@AlessiaMistique
1 year ago
wow amazing !!!
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@doctorgirl3763
2 years ago
It's just amazing
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@_40_chan
3 weeks ago
Amazing. I like this video. Human body is amazing. MasaAllah
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@priyapasi9284
1 year ago
Thanks you soooooo much
It's help me a lot
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@BigJMC
10 months ago
Idk who built this system whether it be God, the Universe, Aliens, whatever, it’s absolutely brilliant.
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@uditamondal567
1 year ago
woww️ this is great learning
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@sai1f
3 months ago
great that's explain a lot
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@kelechikalu2666
3 months ago
Superb
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@googlespynetwork
9 months ago
But people claim there is no design behind this incredible process.
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1 reply
@anema.392
2 months ago
شكرًا لدكتور حسام، وتحياتنا لكلية الطب / جامعة ميسان، راجين أن تكون أسئلة الفسلجة ضمن المستوى المعقول (وهو ما عودتمونا عليه).
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@Rashid1.11
11 months ago
Thanks a lot
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@user-jo5ht6qm4b
2 years ago
Very useful method to learn
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@grrr9009
1 year ago
Thank you ️
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@learnwithwk5327
1 year ago
very nice video
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@Lannnaa
2 years ago
It’a really usefull thankkk youuu!
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@umadevi626
2 years ago
Thank you so much mam .It helped me a lot
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@Freire09
1 month ago
fantastic
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@Mohamed05964
1 year ago
شكرا هذا يجعلني اتعلم اشياء رائعة
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@jxzzyg
2 years ago
Underrated.
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@bommarillu1
1 year ago
great video
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@pollo5173
1 year ago
WOW increible video!!!!
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@95zoin
6 months ago
Should I learn CG or Multimedia technology to make this video?
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@simgenurbayram2719
1 year ago
Amazing!!
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@mahiyakhan2289
1 year ago
So good
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@Shreeom_2020
6 months ago
Shree Swami samartha ️
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@_A_TruongNhaNguyen
2 years ago
thank you!
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@Mahe1982Tamizh
2 years ago (edited)
Questions:
1. So when does a gene get switched on ?
2. Where does the DNA code reside ?
3. Where does the transfer RNA come from with the amino acid ?
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@m1chelleZhang
2 months ago
our teacher used your video thanku!
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@Mahesh-sk8ci
1 year ago
Wow...i understood clearly
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@A_Weird_Blue_Guy
1 year ago
So to just understand this better can anyone correct me if I'm wrong, genes in the nucleus are turned into messenger RNA BY RNA polymerase. This messenger RNA then goes to the ribosome and the ribosome reads the RNA. When the RNA is read other RNA carrying amino acids come and deliver the amino acid that segment of the RNA wanted. Then the amino acids combine to form a protein. This is how it works if I'm not mistaken right?
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@akankshanailartist8437
2 years ago
Excellent
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@truelife6266
2 years ago
Outstanding gjb
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@Very-average
1 year ago (edited)
DNA goes to the rna polymerase and turns to rna at the star sign and then ends in the end sign moves to TRNA and then the Amina acids on top of the tRNA makes a string and wraps up to a protein finished
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@riyadhossainsojol5588
1 year ago
What a mechanism
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@leelajha6468
1 year ago
Too good
Itz so real
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@AbdullahMalik0372
8 months ago
Amazing
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@doithani9214
2 years ago
Science is my weekest subject and i am scared from bord ex but this video help me a lots thanks to this teacher
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@maheenshah5343
2 years ago
Amazing amazing video
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@aritradas846
6 months ago
Lovely
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@carolsoliman9515
2 years ago
When we see these vedios we can't believe that all of this is happening inside us its like a factory
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@infonomics
1 year ago
Co-discoverer of DNA Francis Crick once said "Humans are nothing but a pack of neurons."
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@user-pi2om6ig4s
9 months ago
Perfect ️
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@_Muslim_5
1 year ago
It's the greatness of the creator، my friend
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@_honeysuckle_
3 months ago
Very nice video
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@Mai_san-yx6fe
1 month ago
موضوعنا غداً أن شاء الله بفصل الوراثة كا فهمته كان معقد لكن الان احس اسهل شكراً
طالبة سادس علمي دفعة 2024 >.<
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@cristinajeon5150
1 year ago
Amazing
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@ayeshabhatti4941
2 years ago
Very helpful video
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@hagr.r.r
2 weeks ago
I don't know how some people say there is now god. Ahhhh look at u. We are designed perfectly. It's literally I still amazedddd when learning more .
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@KharisPsalm
1 year ago
God is indeed amazing and his wisdom is infinite!!!! Praise God for his wonders shall never end .
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@Daily-DiaryVideo-Until-I-Die
8 months ago
なるほど!
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@fatimafunes7009
2 years ago
Very good.
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@anthem4333
5 months ago
Just remember guys, it just started doing this in its own. We weren’t created.
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@supriyomondal7847
11 months ago
what a animation!!!!
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@covalentbond7933
1 month ago
people will get the wrong idea, this is missing the part where the protein is a dancing jumbled mess that can do multiple completely different jobs
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@hsuyunnwadihtwe3253
2 years ago
2:37
No one:
Literally no one:
Not even students genuinely trying to study:
Me: So...proteins look like walnuts.
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@sadfish2835
4 months ago
Hell yeah!
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@sajid7102
1 year ago
Superb ️️️
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@rockflorti
3 weeks ago
Esto es hermosoo
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@praveenamattaparthi6832
2 years ago
Excellent
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@nagarajarajan5979
1 year ago
Nice work videos
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@DeborahLay
2 years ago
Olá!
E como funciona organismo depois que recebe a vacina com RNA? Gostaria de saber a diferença.
Grata.
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@TheStarflight41
1 year ago
This is incredible... no way this happened by chance.
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@joannajoel
1 year ago
All Glory to the Lord for His wisdom in such unfathomable creations
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@abuyousuf7594
1 year ago
Very much helpful
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@rayhanmahmud7487
6 months ago
Great video .But many things are missing.
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@stranger0507
1 year ago
Thanku so much, u clear my doubt,
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@anuragneve5479
1 month ago
That's why protein also called as polypeptide chain
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@zamandhashim
4 months ago
I just love biology.
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@lunaticladybc
4 months ago
Αχ ρε Δημαρέλη πού είσαι?! Η καλύτερη καθηγήτρια ever.
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@droidz-codm6446
2 years ago
THANK U SO MUCH I GOT IT HAHA TAKE THAT BIOTECH TEACHER I DONT NEED U
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@blueberry9177
1 year ago
I dont know who make these video but god blessss you ️️️
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@nameerafatima5311
2 years ago
Amaaaazingg
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@babitarai9580
1 year ago
Video on okazaki fragments pleaseeee
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@user-xw9dr2kz4n
2 months ago
Please upload a video on transcription because it's creating difficulty in understanding transcription due to coding and non coding DNA
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@unknown__op6403
2 months ago
Our teacher showed this video in our class
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@user-hx1nv8bs2u
10 months ago
So nice
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@maddy-wy4be
2 years ago
Nice video and it was good
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@baihaqi3735
5 months ago
Very beautiful isn't it?
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@basimdaoud3814
1 year ago
تبارك الله أحسن الخالقين
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@yanishammaci8638
10 months ago
We will show them Our Signs in the universe, and in their own selves
1
Reply
@jishin7593
3 months ago
Thanks!
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@mahalakshmimalbamalba421
2 years ago
Wow nice to learn
Reply
@amnaz304
2 years ago
Teachers should use such videos while explaining.
Reply
@SH-04ll
1 year ago
"فتبارك الله احسن الخالقين "
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@shb4032
2 years ago
Thank u so so so much️️️
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@asskicka71
2 years ago
dude that’s so fuckin’ cool
Reply
@towfiqhassan5494
1 year ago
Take love from Bangladesh......
1
Reply
@seemagase2782
2 years ago
Very helpful.....thanking u
Reply
@shshwalipathan2099
2 years ago
Very nice
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@meredithajones
2 years ago
Very cool
Reply
@ngoctu2276
8 months ago
hay quá! cái này làm tài liệu đc nè
1
Reply
@giovannisales4228
3 months ago
love from italy
1
Reply
@rameshsalpe1408
11 months ago
Very understanding..️️️️
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@BoDFN
3 months ago
thank youuuu
Reply
@v.k.r.9756
3 months ago
when the mRNA gets modified before exiting the nucleus. 3' end gets a poly A tail (adenylation) and 5' end gets a capped (methylation). with out these modifications the enzymes in the cytoplasm with consider the mRNA foreign and attack it.
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@sukanya.mishraa
1 year ago
Amazing
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@itsmeheq1468
1 year ago
Indeed Allah is best of the creators️
1
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@Raermi0-9
1 year ago
Thank you for this video hello From the Türkiye.
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@Monserrat21Jaqueeee
5 months ago
Good video
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@user-dn9vd9xg9p
1 year ago
So how do the mRNA and rdna and biosimilars meds impact the human body?
1
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@varundate4081
2 years ago
0:59 transcription
1:17 translation
1:42 translocation
goodluck on ur exams!
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@a3avd_
2 years ago
Dude isn't it crazy how they choose their path on their own lol.its like they know what they are doing xD
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4 replies
@hafizmubashir690
2 years ago
Great points mam
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@ahmaddin9635
1 year ago
I am a doctor. This video is very helpful .thanks.
Reply
@maryamnawab3732
1 year ago
How many amino acids are required to make polypeptide chain
1
Reply
@laheekang7420
1 year ago
와...끝내주는 설명이다 3분도안된 시간에 다 이해했어..내가 대학전공할때 이걸 봤으면 유전학 수업 A 받는건데..
Reply
@blmppes9876
2 years ago
this equals to my 5 lessons at school
Reply
@shlokshukla6302
10 months ago
And then there are people who say life is easy and simple
Reply
@shshwalipathan2099
2 years ago
Very nice excellent
Reply
@Samuel-bd1ms
1 year ago
How is a Gene switched on?
How and why are the RNA strands processed?
1
Reply
@IDOIT_GAMER_2000
2 years ago
Wow..... very very helpful... tnx
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@sooryakanthi757
1 year ago
Wow Great informations. Great God. Who put all informations. Amaz ing
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@operationdabardos1236
3 weeks ago
ohh our creator ur greatest
1
Reply
@kacperesz9879
1 year ago
Bài hit làm mưa làm gió một thời của chị Bảo Thy. Cám ơn Đức Phúc mang nó trở lại với màu sắc mới ️
Reply
@thenationsvoicepak9605
1 year ago
Good keep it up
Reply
@dnsallylly
9 months ago (edited)
미연쌤 사랑해요
Reply
@ilariaparesce7898
2 years ago
bel video, complimenti
Reply
@AuV3128
1 year ago
Bruh all this made me hungry
Reply
@ehsan569
4 months ago
10 of the 10
Reply
@zakariaabdi5011
1 year ago
Good video
Reply
@sirajunnisa504
2 years ago
Very well explained tq
Reply
@orchidflower5518
2 years ago
Thanks
Reply
@Priya-zx9gq
3 weeks ago
it's been 9 years
Reply
@matty9738
11 months ago
But what does the processing to remove some sections of the RNA? - what decides which bits to remove?
Reply
@user-wr5bi7ce9z
11 months ago
Can u upload vedio about overlapping and split genes
Reply
@comfortpeople1470
1 year ago
I renenber learning this in elementary 2-5th grade...im here again at 29
Reply
@poojapant7061
2 years ago
Nice
1
Reply
@sardarghulammoheuddin3388
1 year ago
I wanna learn such animation. Recommended some channel or person, teacher?
Reply
@himanshugohil
2 years ago
Please a long vidio make.. Request
1
Reply
@alexandrklimov2601
1 year ago
Спасибо за видео понравилось жду новых выпусков
Reply
@brianseppala8579
1 year ago
Sophia thinks this is awesome!
1
Reply
@mushpi7
1 year ago
exam er ager rate dekhtisi.. 3-4 hr er lecture video r ekhane 2 min a sesh kore dilo joss joss
obosso, ekhan kar kisu exam er khatay lekhar moto na,, - HSC22
Reply
@Vampirina_vampire-
7 months ago
Bro the voice of this video is very scary of me
1
Reply
@syntacticcave9514
2 years ago
Catchy
Reply
@user-ur3vl7li5m
1 year ago
Thanks it helped me to Andre stand what DNA all about and the future of it since I am invested in big time wish me a good luck
Reply
@diggergalaxy
5 months ago
where does the protein go at the end?
Reply
@AhmedMohmed-pc7wu
2 years ago
مهم جدا انك تشوف الحاجه على الطبيعة
نصيحه ل اى حد بيدرس فى مدرسه أو جامعه عربيه لا تعتمد على معلومات الكتب ابحث عن المزيد كى تتقدم
لا تتحجج بأن التعليم سئ عندنا نحن العرب لتصنع قمة ينظر لها العالم كله ،
1
Reply
1 reply
@niyatikaushik4343
1 year ago
And the last process is called Translation (RNA → Protein)
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@Imperatorius45
1 year ago
The more you learn, the more you realize you have no idea what's going on
Reply
@aleaguilar9813
2 years ago
All this it's bizarre, almost a little scary.
Reply
@abdullahmabugoush3689
3 months ago
Shout out to the Cameraman
Reply
@azamkhan1526
2 years ago
thanks to my school teacher who fcuked up my biolgy forever
Reply
@vishnup4034
2 years ago
this helped . believe me!!
Reply
@skyblueee5431
2 years ago
The human body is so amazing! chromosome and DNA are so beautiful to look at
Reply
@DeloofTegOrb
2 years ago
The problem with this is that it is missing a lot of information.
Reply
@saraissa7858
1 year ago
Wow!It is amazing . I do not believe Subhan Allah
1
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@sarahsaeedshaikh731
2 years ago
What about giving information to tRNA like there are different types of Amina acids tRna needs information to collect according ?
Reply
@royhoran3779
2 years ago
Much faster learning with graphical videos
2
Reply
@krzysztofpieniazek2730
2 months ago
What was before the dna code? How did it evolve? From what? Anybody?
Reply
@astha_yadav
1 year ago
Finally i get this topic, where can i donate money to you please ??
Reply
@iAmJoshC
1 month ago (edited)
The tRNA with the chain of many AA Is It the P or E position of the rybosome?
Reply
2 replies
@Katana.J
2 years ago (edited)
Can you till us how did you make this vid ..?
Which program did you use ..?
Reply
@AbukarMohammed.
1 year ago
Daniel this is for you
Reply
@chiknsld3856
1 year ago
where do the free bases in the nucleus come from?
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@christopheb9221
2 years ago
how does the rna get out of the nucleus? it just eventually happens?
Reply
@kcsiddhartha
4 months ago
How did I end here lol
1
Reply
@ronaldmorgan7632
1 year ago
And, the protein somehow gets to where it's needed.
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1 reply
@jamac98
1 year ago
this vidoe must watch my teacher to avoide misunderstanding students
1
Reply
@piposcat
4 months ago
Thanks. Understood how the chromosome actually looks like after almost 4 years. Thanks again, thanks very much.
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@zoogiepoogie8105
10 months ago
Subhanallah. How beautifully my Allah has designed a process which is on microscopic level.from huge structure like sun to a microscopic structure like nucleotide.Allah o akbar
1
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1 reply
@biology-tutor
11 months ago
Someone should help with how to make such presentations for my biology classes.....thanks!
Reply
@brendatang427
2 years ago
Thank youuu
Reply
@Narjis.05
5 days ago
طلاب استاذ محمد ناصر
1
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@shrikrishnavishwakarma3155
1 year ago
Which ribosome add first large subunit or small subunit??
Reply
@barakpick
1 year ago
Great!
Reply
@aadaw6787
1 year ago
Unbelievably well designed by God
Reply
@awaishadi4394
1 year ago
We all are better scientists as we are studying the discoveries of decades or even centuries
Reply
@outofthebox9699
1 year ago
And some people think this was a result of random blind natural processes.
1
Reply
@ShahadatHossain-eh7me
1 year ago
Fine, should be explained in detail
Reply
@niyatikaushik4343
1 year ago
Ok guys so this was "Molecular Basis of Inheritance" in less than 3 minutes
Reply
@shubhamraj1881
2 years ago
There is billions of cell, and thus billions of nucleus, then in that nuclues billions of chromosomes pairs having trillions of gene. mind-boggling complexity.
Reply
@majyamberexxx7468
1 year ago
Thanks
Reply
@azhagesansiva6697
1 year ago
Nice
Reply
@FIREHOT..SHORTS
1 year ago
Thanks
Reply
@akashrajage4346
1 year ago
The video is nice
But it didn't giving the all information
It didn't told about splicing (one of the important process ) in eukaryotes
By the way thanks
1
Reply
@dineshkumarsisodiya4207
1 year ago
Nice
Reply
@videofinder7
1 year ago
Thanks
Reply
@Tabaaa...
1 year ago
Awesome
Reply
@gazishakib3499
1 year ago
thanks
Reply
@mrrishiraj88
2 years ago
Thanks
Reply
@imtryinglol
2 years ago
thanks
Reply
@ajitkarki8286
2 years ago
thanks
Reply
@stars-vb3di
1 year ago
I want to ask a question Soo the RNA polymerase splits the DNA it destroys the Hydrogen bonds between A and T ...C and G then after who is gonna connect it together again??is it the RNA polymerase or the DNA itself please answer quickly and don't mind my English
Reply
1 reply
@RahulKumar-oz3qw
2 years ago
Nice
Reply
@labibsiddiquee509
1 year ago
Great! Go on...
DNA replication - 3D
yourgenome
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10,896,194 views Jun 26, 2015 3D animations
This 3D animation shows you how DNA is copied in a cell. It shows how both strands of the DNA helix are unzipped and copied to produce two identical DNA molecules.
To download the subtitles (.srt) for this video, please use the following link:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B1Cb...
For more information, download the video, and explore related resources on our site: http://www.yourgenome.org/video/dna-r...
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http://www.polymime.com
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yourgenome
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yourgenome
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@megaandry69
6 years ago
Learning about replication without actually seeing it makes actually no sense. A must watch for anyone studying biology-related sciences. <3
3.1K
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12 replies
@Yahsbsuq
6 years ago
Anyone else here because their professor cannot explain things simply?
13K
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349 replies
@melaniesantiago9413
3 years ago
As a senior bio major I shed a tear watching this... so beautiful
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27 replies
@zannat328
3 years ago
My biology teacher explained really good and now seeing this video makes dna replication totally clear to me. Thank you!
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13 replies
@livingmybetsylife
4 years ago (edited)
Here is a basic & simplified version of the video:
BASICS:
Adenine --> Thymine
Cytosine --> Guanine
PREPARING TO REPLICATE:
-Helicase splits the DNA for replication
-Primase adds RNA bases (primer) to the leading strand.
-Why does DNA polymerase require a primer before it adds DNA nucleotides? It is because the RNA primer will have a free -OH group at the end that it can nucleotides to!
-DNA Polymerase binds to the primer to start replication!
REPLICATION:
-The leading strand TEMPLATE will have a daughter strand that is created 5' to 3', in the direction of the REPLICATION FORK (where DNA becomes uncoiled).
-The lagging strand TEMPLATE will have a daughter strand that is ALSO created in the 5' to 3' direction, but it will replicate in the OPPOSITE direction of the REPLICATION FORK.
-That's not okay! Because it is in the opposite direction of the replication fork, it needs to be made in fragments (Okazaki Fragments).
FINISHING TOUCHES:
-Exonuclease removes the RNA primers that were added to the start. We don't want RNA in our DNA!
-DNA polymerase then adds DNA bases to the missing spots where the RNA primers were.
-Ligase makes sure all the fragments are sealed
CLOSING:
-DNA is described as semi-conservative because there is one old and one new strand of DNA in each DNA.
Thanks and hopefully this will help you for your bio test
I know it did for me :)
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101 replies
@davis6123
5 years ago
Take notes, biology teachers. This is how you teach this.
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5 replies
@janavichaurasia4836
2 weeks ago
Any neet student here
46
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8 replies
@abduallahghanem
11 months ago
Almost 8 years ago and this is one of the best DNA replication videos I've ever seen so far! Great visualization!
124
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@lenad.7479
8 years ago (edited)
Τhis was actually the only video that made me finally understand it..good job :)
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yourgenome
·
20 replies
@estrellaswarez9876
4 years ago
I’m French and I’ve understood it better in English because professors or unable to EXPLAIN IT CLEARLY IN A SIMPLE WAY !
549
Reply
17 replies
@wanirayees6311
1 year ago
I'd lost all the hope that I'd ever understand replication, after watching this precise , short and easy-understanding video , I'm feeling refreshing now. Hats off to that person who made this...
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@geetikasaini3389
2 years ago (edited)
I learnt DNA replication from ritu man seriously telling mam ki lecture ki baad animation ki jarurat nhi hote h pr m ne yeh dekha or bhi clear ho gaya️why not school teacher teach like this ??? Fir bol te h bache nhi pdh te
7
Reply
@withlovegracies
5 years ago
i just passed my biology daily test today about dna after i watched this yesterday night. I wanna give you a BIG thankyou for helping me study
615
Reply
11 replies
@chirayatabasu
6 years ago
A 3.30 min video made me understand what 3 lectures of 2 hrs each couldn't !
95
Reply
@dipteeshukla7
2 months ago
im literally crying because this is so good. merely reading the process just screwed me. thank you so much for the efforts.
9
Reply
1 reply
@clarapalomodiaz8500
2 years ago
this just brings me back to life and makes me forget every "imperfection" I think I have
16
Reply
@riemomar7820
4 years ago
This video is amazingly incredible. It is precise, up to the point and explains everything in 3:28 min with clear voice with synchronized animation. This video is the best that explains Dna replication on YouTube. It probably deserves a million likes
417
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5 replies
@kinderjoy422
3 years ago
How on earth did someone discover this and all the details?
901
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51 replies
@labonyasuprovadeb34
2 weeks ago
This 3 minutes video was more helpful than my madams 3 hours long class.
Failed to understood a single word there
Thanks!
1
Reply
@jamirahman8339
2 years ago
That's a gem.
Three & half a minute is more precious than three & half an hour without seeing the animation.
4
Reply
@TheGuitarpro3
7 years ago
Only video that's straight to the point and explicitly states all the steps .. THANK YOU!
311
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2 replies
@sneezayy4156
3 years ago
It's so interesting to know how our body is made so intricately and it functions in a way that is beyond anything that we would make artificially.
349
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15 replies
@booplesnoot
2 years ago (edited)
This video is super good in helping visualize the entire replication process. Although I think there was slight oversight in the direction of the DNA strand because in the beginning of the vid, the top strand was labeled 5' on the left side and 3' on the right side, but when DNA polymerase was introduced, the top strand was suddenly 3' on the left side and 5' on the right side.
2
Reply
@liam8398
2 years ago
I love how the first strand replication process is very simple, while the second strand replication is 100x more complicated lol.
7
Reply
@vlova6410
6 years ago
Finally can understand how lagging strand is replicated. Thank you!
205
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2 replies
@Rockina2bar
7 years ago
The best replication animation i have seen yet, thanks a lot!
591
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3 replies
@ellemerrosecastanares4292
1 year ago
Amazing!!! You have nailed it in minutes. I love how you explained everything about DNA replication. It was perfectly matched with an animation that adds to the total presentation. Your video is fun to watch and easy to understand
6
Reply
@carowkart9836
3 years ago
I'm so glad I speak English. Here in Brazil we have amazing teachers, but i'm a more visual student, so it's a lot easier to learn with 3d videos
6
Reply
@amazingme894
6 years ago (edited)
my mind is blown this is the 100th video ive watched tonight and it is the only one i understood god bless
411
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11 replies
@chanikarkare727
4 years ago
I don't understand why teachers can't explain like this ; slow and straight to the point . All they do is draw a diagram ( totally not realistic ) and ask us to write notes . And we are like lol what just happened .
139
Reply
7 replies
@georgexu4528
2 years ago
Yep this three minutes video somehow explains the topic better than my teacher on an 1h lecture.......
2
Reply
@aryn-jaeger
2 weeks ago
Anyone here because they're gonna turn spiderman with a new experimented dose of spider genome lol
4
Reply
1 reply
@-AhmedOsamaMohammedAlOtaibi
4 years ago
I think that my biology teacher didn’t actually know how to explain this so he just resorted to this video lol
303
Reply
10 replies
@MrFunsized13
5 years ago
This was by far the best video I've seen of this. Straight and to the point, no annoying music, and simple visuals. Absolutely fantastic!
34
Reply
@7own878
3 years ago (edited)
Wow you are a life safer. Thank you so much. This animation should be shown in every biology class on this topic.
Edit: I suggested it to my teacher. It might have an impact. Good job!!!
7
Reply
@Vinayak_Nair
2 years ago
Very helpful animation! Thanks for visually showing the difference between an RNA primer and an Okazaki fragment; that made it easier to understand.
3
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@KristysEdits
4 years ago
Life is so perfect.
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75 replies
@livingmorganism
4 years ago
Easily the best replication video I've seen to date, thank you. I don't understand why it's so difficult for professors to explain this in a simple step by step process. I get that it's a complex topic, but damn, just go step by step. Stop talking about random enzymes in no discernible order.
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1 reply
@andrea06s51
6 months ago
thank you for doing this - from a Vietnamese student at high school.
1
Reply
@belkacemzakariamira4303
2 years ago
this video made me understand the dna replication in a perfect way, the animation is amazing and made it easier to understand especially in the part where the replication is in the opposit direction it was hard to get it at first but after this video i found it actually so simple. thank you for this amazing explication, well done.
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Reply
@suzylebrun5061
3 years ago
As a science teacher this is by far the best replication video out there. Thanks for the clear description!
42
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@vini6699
5 years ago
As a 3D artist, I feel it’s awesome to see these types of animations being used in education. Keep up the great work!
73
Reply
3 replies
@arianareid1561
3 years ago
wow. after a boring recorded lecture and endless youtube videos, i finally understand from a 3 minute video.
1
Reply
@momina.202
7 months ago
Awesome...I have read this topic 5 years ago...and till today read many times but didn't understand properly...today watching it I feel I have a clear concept about dna replication
Reply
@manuelsputnik
4 years ago
Excellent animation.
I wished it showed how topoisomerase did it's work in separating the overcoiled knots of daughter DNA strands.
34
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1 reply
@deborahmutombo7224
7 years ago
Best video ever to show DNA replication! No other video that I could find really explains in a short but well detailed manner. Other videos I feel are for those who are already familiar with the process. This is my first year learning this process and I'm grateful I found this video!!
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@summayashafaat8068
2 years ago
Absolutely a great video was unable to understand replication process but this animated video has put away my all confusion
4
Reply
@mawderation
2 years ago
This video is so wonderfully helpful. I was struggling thru diagrams in the text trying to get all the weird terms to stick and this is exactly what I needed to see and how I needed it explained. Thants!
1
Reply
@songofthesea9527
7 years ago
This was very helpful, I've been studying this for a few days now but I've always had a fuzzy picture of how the lagging strand is formed. Your video cleared everything up. Thank you!
17
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@zeeshansyed511
5 years ago
What took Biology 12 between 3 - 4 weeks to explain, explained in 3 minutes. All I’ve got to say
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1 reply
@rushdahbintmuzaffar5067
1 year ago
Beautiful. I am in love with these videos. So easy to understand for a concept I have been struggling to understand for a long time. A big thank you to the one who took pains to make this video. Please keep providing students with such useful concepts in easy form.
Reply
@sanadsharif818
1 month ago
One of the best videos on the internet, so underrated
Reply
@corn7344
5 years ago
After 20 minutes of watching videos and re-watching them, this one did the most at helping me understand the process.
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Reply
@user-sw7xu2jw6b
4 years ago
한국어 자막 달아주신분 감사합니다 덕분에 잘 공부하고 갑니다
31
Reply
2 replies
@dasunikaimalshi9611
3 months ago
The best guidance for DNA replication and anyone can understand smoothly...Thank you
1
Reply
@neetaspirant2601
2 years ago
Very easy to understand whole process of DNA replication through this video...thanks a lot
8
Reply
@TheluvvlyLyss
3 years ago
Out of all the DNA replication videos this one is so good, very detailed and easy to understand thank you
19
Reply
@notinuseanymoree
3 years ago
The word one direction triggered my inner directioner lmao.... okay I need to get back to studying
42
Reply
3 replies
@tramnguyen0000
1 month ago
My god this 3 minute video single handedly gets me though the exam. Thank you so so much for ever making this video.
Reply
@blankaszewczyk8323
7 months ago
Thank you so much. It took me so long to understand this, but this video explained it so well! Much appreciated
Reply
@abdishakur9103
4 years ago
Such a short clip is worth more than a thousand books.
4
Reply
@kimyejin3080
3 years ago
정말정말정말 감사합니다
Thank you sooo much 자막 달아주신분두요ㅜㅜ
4
Reply
@gr.rihime9697
2 years ago
映像で見るとやはり分かりやすい。復習する際にも、動画で流れを確認すると思い出しやすい。
Reply
@nightmaregamer3711
2 years ago
Wow, what an amazing video! Incredible animation of this complicated process...helped me a lot with my schoolwork.
3
Reply
@skrozneobican
7 years ago
The old but gold DNA replication This is so inspirational. Thank you so much, It helps a lot in learning, but also revising.
25
Reply
@let4be
4 years ago (edited)
This is sooooo amazing with 3d visualisation I have chills when watching this... Gonna watch 9-10 times probably to remember it better...
7
Reply
@rottingarchangeloi2734
2 years ago
My professor litearlly took 8 lessons to explain this process and almost nobody got it, it’s way simpler than I thought thank you
Reply
@unique2457
1 year ago
Simple and comprehensive video .. At first I thought it was an obscure concept , but after watching this video I got it...
1
Reply
@rmeyer6867
5 years ago
Short and concise! Best explanation I found so far on the internet. It also shows how easy it is for this process to make small mistakes hereby distorting the DNA replication process with all the consequences that follow.
5
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@ellina5898
4 years ago
I must say, for the very first time I can really understand what DNA replication is all about....
Thanks a lot for such a amazing video
25
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@ghadam.hassaan4143
2 years ago
Simple explanation. Beautiful animation. I couldn't possibly wrap my mind around this Okazaki business before I watched this.
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@omgarhwal9634
2 years ago
This is the best explanation I could've ever got for DNA Replication
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@drewthornley6863
6 years ago
My life I must be a visual learner this is the first time i have ever had a clue about the lagging strand
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@yarenkuzucu2733
5 years ago
this is so magical that i can’t stop rewatching
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1 reply
@l.p.22
2 years ago
As a IB student I was desperately looking for this kind of video, thank you very much!
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@aiueo4233
5 months ago
I'm a high school student in Japan.
Text book is no movie, so this YouTube is good for me. Thank you!
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@aminabenz.
6 years ago
can't believe i haven't found this earlier after so much of my time wasted trying to look for a simple explanation like this. thank you so much i finally understand it.
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@durgeshyadav7608
4 years ago
Biology teachers should learn how to teach replication and some other topics soo easily as in this video.
Finally I understood Replication with the help of this video. Thanks a lot
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1 reply
@dharmgurjar7
2 years ago
Actually once you see it you can never forget DNA replication, thank you very much.
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@Pluske1407
2 years ago
Thank you so much, I had to learn for my biology exam today and this video made things al lot easier to understand!!
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@arianagowda3992
4 years ago
Thank you!! Showing it to my Biology class. In the future could you also include Topoisomerase's role unwininding the DNA?
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@davivvd1994980
6 years ago
This is one of the best videos for explaining DNA replication, thank you!
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@archnav7510
2 years ago
Fantastic explanation...every time before my exams I use to watch this video for better clarity...
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@srabantybiswas1539
2 years ago (edited)
For the very first time, I understand the okazaki fragment clearly through this video :').. Thank you so much.
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@osho8262
3 years ago
Finally I'll be visualize the process of DNA replication
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@Rik-jl5dc
4 years ago
One of the most helpful video I've ever seen. Thanks for it.
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@AS-qi2lq
2 years ago
Perfectly summarises everything.
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@umeshmidha7017
1 year ago
'The best things in life are available for free' this video totally proves it. Thank you so much
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@shohanshihab7334
6 years ago
god bless the maker of this video.Finally I have understood the process of DNA replication. Its really Owsome!
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1 reply
@jeffstans5185
7 years ago
hands down the best video explaining this concept, and trust me I looked at lots
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@taramagar6880
2 years ago
This should be shown by every bio teachers to their students. It really clears some doubts!!
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@tyler9753
1 year ago
great video. animations are a real great way to explain something on a molecular level, really helps the understanding.
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@lipibanerjee9791
3 years ago
Okay so here commenting 5 later...and this is the best video on Replication so far!
Wish you keep uploading such ...
Thanks a lot
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@advancekashmir9846
4 years ago
If I have these videos on every topic, I'd be the smartest student in my university.
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@user-bf2ue5iq5x
1 year ago
しっかり海外でも岡崎フラグメントになってるのなんか感動
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1 reply
@papercloudds
2 weeks ago
this is excellent !! made my preparation for bio exam better ,thanks !!
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@JesusHasRisen1
3 years ago
I really hope all y'all who are watching this begin to think to yourselves, "How can this incredibly complicated process have risen by undirected, blind chance?" These perfectly-tuned enzyme mini machines do their respective tasks with unparalleled precision. Tell me, which evolved first, the enzymes or the DNA?
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@tommysleeman7402
7 years ago
Extremely helpful! You have done a wonderful job. Thanks a lot.
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@malakmohammedahmedmohammed8615
4 months ago
I said it and repeat : It's the best type of explanation ever.
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@brinleybotha3394
2 years ago
As a matric student writing my final biology paper tomorrow these videos have literally saved my life at this point thank you so much
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@venkateshdaivajnya5376
5 years ago
Best animation ever,and the lady was explaining very good
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@NtWarlock
5 years ago
Thank you very much!
very simple explanation. I used this video for my genetics exam and it was very useful
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@abigailsowles8813
2 years ago
Great video! Very detailed and concise. I would like to point out that ligase is only on the lagging strand due to the Okazaki fragments only being on the lagging strand.
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1 reply
@Armoniiiii-mu6he
3 weeks ago (edited)
Best and easy way to understand and better than protracted videos
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@sanjanagupta2031
3 years ago
Anyone else here because the teacher suggested this video
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3 replies
@nids008
2 years ago (edited)
How fascinating this is. Hard to understand when someone teaches this but easily understandable through animation. But sometimes it feels like does this really happen?? I mean has anyone literally seen this happening..don’t know.
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1 reply
@llaytonshuemaker3830
1 year ago
Learned more from the 3 minute video than I did from my professors 2 hour long lecture that mainly consisted of word vomit and pointing at words on a PowerPoint. Thanks
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@iMusikkForeva
1 year ago
I come back to this video once a year for at least one of my bio courses. Many thanks!
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@zakariajony4193
7 years ago
Wonderful explanation!!! Really loved it. Thank you for making this kind of video.
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@Zahra-bi4bw
4 years ago
This is seriously the best video on YouTube about this topic
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@eusrasharfuddin2786
6 months ago
Excellent video and explaining
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@corinasumang1459
2 years ago
Thank you for sharing this video. This would be a big help to understand the concepts of DNA replication. It's amazing..very comprehensive and well explained. Permission to share the link with my students for them to watch and learn more about DNA Replication. Thank you in advance.
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@selinan2657
4 years ago
Omg I love you so freackin much. German channels can‘t explain shit even though I watched 10000 Clips about DNA-Replication. So much love️️️
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@Ridha_sh2006
5 days ago
حيا الله طلاب السادس العلمي بويه
Final year high school students in Iraq welcome you 🇮🇶
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@janedesilets
1 year ago
I learn better visually, and videos like this have helped my comprehension of the material immensely.
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@costaave
1 year ago
so simplified and yet all points covered I will cry buckets right now .
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@justthejust9868
5 years ago
So much easier to understand when its visualized
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@ashokkumarkurup4293
5 years ago
You are the best teacher , kudos
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@laksha2234
2 years ago
Today’s kids are very lucky that they get so many free resources to visually explain these complex processes. I hated the hours long boring classes when i was in high school even when the teacher tried so hard to visualize these mechanisms limited by their chalk and dusters.
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@abdellatifberrada1199
3 weeks ago
ty alot guys your explanations are as clear as crystal ! neat !
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@SurekhaDintakurty
6 years ago
I learned more biology in this video than 10 lectures worth of biology i am amazed
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@potnoodlehead8173
8 years ago
this will help me in school thanks for this I realy needed help
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@v_n_s3248
6 months ago
Very beautiful, explanation is 100% clear though
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@Victoria-lq6gw
2 years ago
This video single handily helped me finally understand the process.
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@frapechinokelsey6451
3 years ago
I'm in 12 standard from INDIA 🇮🇳 & I found this video which really boosted my knowledge
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1 reply
@miraechoi8566
4 years ago
best video. wow, thank you for the simplicity
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@studentofscience860
2 years ago
Made my notes in one video. Really a good lecture.
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@danijane2819
2 years ago (edited)
This is an incredible explanatory video!!! Thank you so much for creating it!
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@kirtimazum
5 years ago
This video helped me a lot.
Thank u so much :)
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@sasikiranravulapalli7
2 years ago
Is there more simple process to learn
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@omar404ahmed
5 months ago
This 3-minute video explained the concept better than a 90 minute lecture by my professor.
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@sgdigital2026
1 year ago
just imagine how many hours, days,months were spent just to make this small video. hats off to the maker.
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@rakshithareddy707
6 years ago
thank u so much
u r better than my lecturer
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@gauravburaniya9690
6 years ago
this is what i need . thank youuuuu sooo muchhhh
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@notgeneralroblox
1 year ago
bro, these 3D videos are so good
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@asmaasma6165
2 years ago
The best genetics video I've watched so far
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@Super050488
7 years ago
Bom vídeo! Completo! Adorei! Parabéns aos idealizadores!
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@ariqahmedansari
3 years ago
Here is a basic, simplified version of the video:
Adenine --> Thymine (in RNA it would be Uracil)
Cytosine --> Guanine
-The Helicase splits the DNA, for replication
-Primase adds RNA bases (primer) to top strand, known as the leading strand
-DNA polymerase binds the primer to the DNA
-This goes 5' to 3'
-For the bottom strand (lagging) it adds RNA bases in fragments (Okazaki segments) because it goes 5' to 3'
-Exonuclease removes some RNA primers
-DNA polymerase then adds DNA to the missing spots.
-Ligase makes sure all the fragments are sealed
-DNA is described as semi-conservative, because there is one old and one new strand of DNA in each DNA.
Thanks and hopefully this will help you for your bio test
I know it did for me :)
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@richepaul-xs9ek
7 months ago
Too amazing to understand.
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@dr.adhunik3729
2 years ago
I don't know that this concept is so easy but after seeing this video i realized it is easy thank u yourgenome
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@roshnirs1378
4 years ago
Thank you ma'am ....very helpful I finally understood this concept ..
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1 reply
@darshanakhachar4746
1 year ago
Isn't this enough to give us a thought about why r we created so perfectly ?
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@darsh4484
1 year ago
Thanks for explaining this complex mechanism so beautifully
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@MBAUER-od6fc
2 years ago
These videos are very good! Explain complicated things in a simple way!
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@a42lalrinkimi48
3 years ago
I just love how my teacher made this into an hour long lecture.
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1 reply
@habibaakter9512
5 years ago
I get understood by this video
THANKS
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@user-dg9yl8nc5g
2 years ago (edited)
one of the best videos on Youtube NO CAP
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@kulsum-hamid0818
2 years ago
It really makes me clear each and everything about DNA replication... Thank Uh so much
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@ferperez87
7 years ago
yesssss i finally get it after watching 300 videos!!! lol
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@yogeshgupta4667
7 years ago
finally I got it..
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@richasingh9613
2 years ago
That's the video I was looking for...excellent animation
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@alicias.h.4480
2 years ago
Thank you for this absolutely helpful video!
Genetic is such an amazing topic :))
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@josiahschiewe9618
7 years ago
Very helpful video. Thank you!
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@freddykruger3756
3 years ago
wow thank you! never understood this in biology class neither in my university course, but these 3 minutes were the revolution of my understanding process
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@k.k6910
1 month ago
All I can say is wowGod bless you for the great teachings, really really amazing
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@VG__
2 years ago (edited)
It was so articulate and clear️
Lovely! Thankyou
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@heenakouser9489
6 years ago
Helpful video thank you
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@devitanurul5655
7 years ago
Great! this video really helps me.
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1 reply
@proudindian6861
2 years ago
This is probably the BEST WAY OF USING TECHNOLOGY !!!
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@user-lz8pr1cn8v
1 month ago
Did i just understand a 3 hour concept from my tuition in just 3 minutes? YES!!!!
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@notyeesy9430
3 years ago
생명시간에 뭔소린지 몰랐는데 이거 보니까 한방에 이해됨
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1 reply
@fibonacci5714
2 years ago
Ben hayatımda böyle muhteşem video görmedim.
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4 replies
@_MH_d
1 year ago
OMG it cleared all my concepts in just 3 min!!! What an amazing video!!
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@anusuabiswas1606
2 years ago
this was way better than what i understood in class so thank you!
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@Marco-us7rp
3 years ago
i lernt now wie dna working - greeting from India :)
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@ashantal5172
5 years ago
This was extremely helpful.
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@Luizz34
2 months ago
this is the best explanation I've ever watched!!
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@usmetaompongen2625
8 months ago
One of the best explanation for me so far
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@rahul-ze1fg
7 years ago
simple.... and best for basic...!!!
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@tabanisyes7051
6 years ago
finally i get it thank u very much
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@sulives
3 years ago
I now finally have the clarity of DNA replication.
Keep this work going. Make more videos.
Thank You
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@user-xo1nb8dp1n
2 months ago
3 minutes and you made everything clear luv uuuuu
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@user-yn3vy3sn8n
5 years ago (edited)
Perfect
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@mariam2049
7 years ago
Thank you so much
3
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@eeshahassan485
1 year ago
bless u my teacher tought it horribly u made it easy for me to understand this concept
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@shynaashmita1860
2 years ago
One of the best video with detailed explanation.....thank u soo much for that....it helps the start off biology students alots....highly appreciated
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@zainabb.2792
6 years ago (edited)
How does a protein do that? How does it move like that? This is so unbelievable! Does science know the techniques behind the proteins' movements? Is there some kind of gravity????
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@zeynepyarenylmaz555
7 years ago
thank you
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@Cute_bhagya11
2 years ago
This vdo makes understand everything so simply and in a beautiful manner...️
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@dadslilgirl1029
1 year ago
I think this vedio shoud be a teacher guide for our biology teachers hats off to the creator of this vedio️
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@raniabenabou8481
4 years ago
We watched this in class with my phone Hehe
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@user-pj7tt2jy4h
3 years ago
This perfect structure and mesmerizing mechanisms couldn’t be created by a chance..
God creates everything perfectly I’m so shocked by the perfection
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@udayvishwakarma7343
3 years ago
Literally this is a wave of direct head transmission
Thanks!!
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@mehmanememmedzade9460
1 year ago
Anyone here just because they were curious and are not studying any related majors?) I read about genes from a book but it was only information dump, so grateful to whomever made this animation, very useful
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@Cr7_8a
5 days ago
طلاب سالم
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@kimchau8647
4 years ago
I thought the leading strand is synthesized from 3' to 5' ?
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1 reply
@R2Rose11
11 days ago
I am Bangali but seeing your video it is helpful for me.
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@loreolivos7291
10 months ago
hi there, thanks for this great video.
could someone please explain to me what is exactly meant with 3' and 5' prime ends?? thanks a lot
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@uxiexzxzxzx7013
4 years ago
HELLO FAST GRADE 10 S.Y. 2019-2020 HAHAHA
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@danzrock2898
2 years ago
Molto interessante mentre annaffi il cane
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1 reply
@gunamuthu3761
2 years ago
Best video ive seen on DNA replication!
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@isurikaweerarathne4923
8 months ago
Thank you so much . I'm a A/l biology student in sri lanka 🇱🇰
This video is very helpful to me
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@mahmouddridi386
2 years ago
Quran "" We will show them Our signs in the horizons and within themselves until it becomes clear to them that it is the truth. But is it not sufficient concerning your Lord that He is, over all things, a Witness?""
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@rokeyaakter2100
4 years ago
I thought you as the girl of Google Translator[English]
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1 reply
@fungusinthedark254
2 years ago
Amazing, really helpful video!!
I have a question - the DNA polymerase is adding those new nucleotide parts to the DNA, but where do they come from?
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@dishapatil9401
2 years ago
My teacher teaching 4 hrs understanding 2%
Learning from u 3 min understanding 100%
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@instagator8913
3 years ago
The way the Helicase looks makes me uncomfortable.
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@extraextra4848
3 years ago
did I just learn something in 3:28 minutes when I had 80 minutes of pure confusion? no.
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@appufan716
2 years ago
This video made my concept crystal clear
1
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@anugrahkp8982
2 years ago
Excellent presentations... Hands off to you guyzz...
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@meriemhousni7449
4 years ago
لا إله إلا الله
محمد رسول الله
يقول الله تعالي
فاعلم أنه لا إله إلا الله
قال تعالي
)والله مخرج ما كنتم تكتمون.......)
وقال تعالي
)مالك يحي الله الموتي ويريكم آياته لعلكم تعقلون ثم قست قلوبكم من بعد ذلك فهي الحجارة أ و أشد قسوة............)البقرة
يقول سبحانه
)وكذلك جعلنا في كل قرية اكابر مجريميها
ليمكروا فيها وما يمكرون إلا بأنفسهم وما ويشعرون.....)
وقال سبحانه
)ولقد علمتم اللذين اعتدوا منكم في السبت فقلنا لهم كونوا قردة خاسءيين.....)
قال تعالي
)ومن يتعدي حدود الله فقد ظلم نفسه والله رؤوف بالعباد.....
يقول سبحانه
)يوم نبطش البطشة الكبري إنا منتقيمون...
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1 reply
@paolo3347
2 years ago
A che cazzo mi serve imparare sta roba?
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@averageYTviever
5 months ago
fav dna replication animation since 1st year college
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@SnowInHere
1 year ago
That is quite amazing; super helpful and easy to understand. Thanks ever so much!
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@oscarmoreno2585
4 years ago
1:35 1D... Zayn
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2 replies
@mohammedalmalki8609
1 year ago
سبحان الله الخالق sobhan allah alkhaleq
3
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1 reply
@roy09arijit
2 years ago
Everywhere I go, I see this fantastic one
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@renmamamiya1110
4 months ago
Thank you, made my exam really well
1
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@-ero.9_6_9
2 days ago
اكو طلاب سادس هنا لو بس اني
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2 replies
@releon7036
3 years ago
I’m here because my teacher open this video in the class
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@ShubhamUniyalyt
7 months ago
Very great explain ma,am
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@gamitubers792
1 month ago
Thank you .....
I never understand these concepts but after watching this I can teach this concepts to another person's
1
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@odume776
2 weeks ago
سبحان الله
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@doctoratunversityofjordan
2 years ago
سبحان الله وبحمده سبحان الله العظيم
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1 reply
@hii2641
1 year ago
My teacher explained it beautifully and after watching this, my tineey-winny confusions are removed!
Thanks!
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@colourfullife-8808
5 months ago
Thank you so much mam ji for providing us this type of session
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@autumn4852
2 weeks ago
And I'm from Mars
4
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@NasserAlhameli
7 years ago
Thank you for the great vid! God is great!!
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9 replies
@taxevader3574
1 year ago (edited)
ur a real one for this one chief
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@trigoclips4974
2 years ago (edited)
I can see how i wasted 1night understanding dna replication. And this video did it in 3mins. Wonderful just wonderful explanation.
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@drd6482
1 month ago
PRETTY COOL #crabs #canthearyouA #disease #hashtag #whynot #hahaha #yeahboi
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2 replies
@muhammedruzgar82
3 years ago
Allahu Ekber
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@wendylaurean6874
1 year ago
This was absolutely beautiful and helpful thank you!
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@hemalatha-pm7gi
2 years ago
This was so amazing !!Thanks a lot!!
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@joaoleorne8082
6 years ago
Is there anyone from Brazil here? Good Video, DNA duplication isn't very complicated:)
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@sahilagrawal4255
5 years ago
Roses are red,
Violets are blue,
I liked my comment
Cause no one else will
Good video tho
5
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@AbrahamKM
7 months ago
Amazing tutorial
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@trishad.605
1 year ago
Finally a video that helped me to “get it.” Thank you!
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@EvitaN
3 years ago
Wow , and people say there's no God. This is so perfect
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1 reply
@user-ze1ce8ig8t
1 year ago
Glory be to God, how He created everything
5
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@jalexander305
2 years ago
This is like an hour of work reading a text book. I love YouTube wish I had this in school.
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@gayatribirajdar4312
1 year ago
Hamare geetendra sir bohot achha padhate hai Aur bohot sare animations bhi dikhate hai..mein sirf revision ke liye phir animations dekhati huu.
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@samin9401
2 years ago
“Our Lord is He Who gave every living thing its constitution then guided it aright.” -Quran(20:50)
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@mattiascrepis1754
2 years ago
Gabellini gay
5
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@lucuma538
2 years ago (edited)
El mejor video de Replicación de ADN que haya visto.Ojala esto nos mostraran en clases o ask de dibujado este en los libros XD
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@crazythings1753
2 years ago
Absolutely perfect explanation after 1 week i am Ethiopian entrances exam candidate and am stress on this part because of you am happy i love you
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@Motorhead1977
7 years ago
woooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooow
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@mateozapicogarcia6929
1 year ago
This kind of animations are great to understand the biological processes.
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@soumyahede1034
2 years ago
Beautifully explained... And made it extremely simple to understand... Thanks!
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@ashnashweta0500
1 year ago
Hello. Thanks for the video. It was very informative and easy to understand. Since I have taken biology recently, I would like to know how often does DNA replication process take place in the cells in everyday life and what is the effect of this process on our body? Why is it actually important?
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@mohsenakhavan3500
3 years ago
Thank you very much. I recommend this video for everyone who would like to understand DNA Replication. Deeply Appreciated.
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@haileyen353
2 years ago
biologists/geneticists: 5' and 3'
mathematicians: 0 and 0
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@hifza1919
6 months ago
what is the role of DNTP ( deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate ) ?
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@dahamiillesinghe4253
4 months ago
This is the video I saw to understand the process well tnx so much
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@tbarkali9677
1 year ago
I watched this video 3 times and i will again ️
1
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@sadiasamira666
9 months ago
This video clean, clear and develop my concept. Really awesome!
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@edwardtherhea6818
3 years ago
I learned a lot about DANN today thanks
2
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@lishashehbaz8221
1 year ago
one of the best and the most clear video explaination
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@angelineeguia7503
4 days ago
Thank youuuuuuu! I thought I was crazy sitting in my class right now like huhhh?? Until my professor told us to watch this lol
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@jamesgordon3494
1 year ago
the animation in this video is mesmerizing amazing job
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@ivansanchez7783
2 years ago
Hi, I loved the video, thank you very much for uploading it!
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@aarshavignesh8800
2 years ago
Such an AmazinG Arrangement ️
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@sooyaluvr
9 days ago (edited)
DNA REPLICATION (semi-conservative bc each DNA molecule is made up of one old, conserved strand of DNA):
1 - separation of 2 strands (unzipping done by helicase, result: replication fork)
2 - separated strands provide template to create new strand of DNA (started by primase, which creates a piece of RNA called primer --- this is the starting point of the new strand of DNA)
3 - DNA polymerase binds to the primer and adds bases from 5' to 3' (in the leading strand). on the other hand in the lagging strand, DNA polymerase adds bases in a series of small chunks called the okazaki fragments
4 - once the DNA has been made, exonuclease removes all RNA primers from both strands of DNA
5 - another DNA polymerase fills the gaps that are left behind with DNA
6 - DNA ligase seals up the fragments of DNA in both strands to form a continuous double strand
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@shahnaznamirafairuza
3 years ago
The best video ever on the subject. Thank you!
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@frederickmuriithi4727
1 year ago
Possible tiny error (not a biologist): it says in the video that DNA polymerase adds in the 5' --> 3' direction. From other literature I have run into, it says that DNA polymerase adds bases in the 3' --> 5' direction, so please verify that for yourselves when watching this.
Other than that, this is a lovely overview. Thanks.
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@yoonoh23
1 year ago
I'm in my senior year of high school. I'm learning protein synthesis and DNA replication. I really like this animation, it's great to have universal scientific facts even in a different language! My teacher's voice echoes in my mind
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7 replies
@Mehedi___
1 year ago
Another day of thanking animesh sir
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@ckg1838
1 year ago
Very easy to understand whole process of DNA replication through this video.
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@nethmikavindya4439
2 years ago
Thank u very much...u simply expalined my one week lecturer within 4 mins...
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@matrixate
1 year ago
Excellent explanation. By far, the best.
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@triplemgaming5103
2 years ago
Put it on 0.75x speed if you can’t take the information in as fast its really helpful
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@tara7678
3 years ago
Cristal clear explanation..
Perfect animation....
I understood it well
Thanks a lot...
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@linamorelia4715
2 years ago
it's amazing, just thank you from a med student in france
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@cakesniffer3848
2 years ago
your videos help me so much during my study thank you!!!
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@rsvs4641
1 year ago
Excellent 3D presentation
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@chereipeach345
2 years ago
Thank you thank you thanks a very lot!!! Day after tmrw I got exam and bcoz of this lockdown I was not able to properly understand legit anything. U cleared it soooo well!!!!!
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@user-hj3vi8dv7q
1 day ago
Una verraquera de explicación. Bacano!
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@DucMinhTeaching
1 year ago
Helicase unzip 2 strands (leading strand and lagging strand)
Leading strand: Primase create RNA called primer. DNA polymerase continuouly binds to the primer (add DNA from 5' to 3')
Okazaki fragment. Start with primer. Bind from 5' to 3'.
Exonuclease remove all RNA primers from both strands
Polymerase fill in the gaps left by RNA primer
DNA ligase fills in the gap
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@aryamanray746
2 years ago
Thanks for making concepts so easy for me
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@aditimishra7638
1 year ago (edited)
Awesome awesome awesome
I'm In standard 12th and i got the concept very smoothly....... A big wow representation... I'm forwarding to my friends too... Loved this (from India)
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@tiffanyyy_y_7649
3 years ago
this video saved my life thank you so much
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@PaulNing
8 months ago
This is why biology is so fascinating. Every time when I see how my body works, I'll think how can I deserve such a sophisticated structure.
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@mohamedalzoraabdelfattahal8837
1 year ago
3minute video explained the whole 1.5 hour lecture even better
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@raalft2756
2 years ago
no words for the video anyone can understand (science students)
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@Grako3404
1 month ago
i'm watching this in 2024 cuz my professor didnt explain it well,but with the aid of this 3d video i've get the concept
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@sethkrebs5032
2 years ago
This video is very helpful for studying replication. Like I LOVE what you got going on here, especially with my Genetics exam coming up in two days... but did we really have to make the proteins brown?
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@tazrianahmed007
4 months ago
So beautifully explained in literally 3 mins and a half, whereas my lecturer in college took 1 hour and a half and still failed , well....on her defense it is pretty hard to teach without visual representation
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3 replies
@ljag9789
1 year ago
Thanks Dr. Shelleburne! it’s Connor btw
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@xmen7448
2 years ago
Ugh Thank God I found this vid , my biology teacher didn't do so well explaining it to me
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@hyerinkang2899
6 months ago
Biology major here and goddamn this saved
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@averageneetaspirant3252
2 years ago
I'm crying rn so beautiful
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@biostaples
1 year ago
CORRECTION: There is not gap between the RNA primer and the added DNA strand. There is a phosphodiester linkage there too.
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@swapnendumallick1929
7 months ago
Literally too too too much helpful
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@amyblack944
2 months ago
The DNA ligase seals up the fragments by phospho diester bond!!
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@juliosalinas2591
1 year ago
Best explanation I have seen. Thank you!
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@mahakhan0998
2 years ago
You made this topic clear to me thanks for your helping
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@shreyanshitripathi365
1 year ago
I would heartly like to thank u...u made my study easy and intresting!.
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@ssuuss539
1 year ago
I’m learning more in 3 minutes than a entire science class lol
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@bigschmill294
2 years ago
It's incredible how complicated this process is. It's like biological machinery
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@Elif-yc6iq
2 years ago
thank you so much from Turkey :)
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@meenakshijyoti4948
2 years ago
To all the Indian 10th graders studying for their board exams,
Fyi, you haven't completed the whole chapter.
But congrats! you just finished a topic!!!!
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@hellomotherfather
4 months ago
the best replication dna explaning
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@user-om3nx6ln4l
2 years ago
This vedio is too useful to understand DNA Replication .....
Thank you
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@adibajannat334
1 year ago
What an excellent animation it is!
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@telasrir3533
1 year ago
This helped me a lot , great work
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@user-hj1jv3ck2i
6 months ago
Super understanding and cool vedio
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@imabelievermyheartisfleshy7540
2 years ago
Thans for turkish subtitle! Veryyy useful, thank you
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@MellowWater
2 years ago (edited)
so many more questions now, what prompts the helicase to split the DNA, how does all this seem so perfectly automated? What starts this chain of events? WHY DOES IT EVEN HAPPEN?
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@gaelulisessanchezrico424
9 months ago
muchas gracias por este gran video que me sirvió mucho para estudiar, que a pesar de que esta en ingles, lo entendí a la perfección
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@alieffathurahman7034
2 years ago
this is so much simple than the giant graphic image of chemical equation or something (idk) with those 5 paragraph of explanation
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@tbarkali9677
1 year ago
Now i really get it cause I wasn’t understanding the professors thanks a lot
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@alfatoxin8701
2 years ago
This video made my life very simple
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@bhawanakanwarshekhawat921
1 year ago
Now it's crystal clear thank you
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@DericDawnsky
4 months ago
Just Remember that Beta clamp enhances the processivity of DNA Polymerase III which have total 3 core polymerases out of which 2 core polymerases are used for the synthesis of the lagging strand enhancing the overall processivity of Pol III
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@JitendraSingh-ck9ys
2 years ago
After seeing the video I came to know how actually this process occurs .
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@mariaalhayek9976
1 year ago
Wow! That's really amazing !
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@yoghurt3361
2 years ago
Beautiful animation Thank you️
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@tracyle4343
2 years ago
Great video! But I think RNA primers are removed by ribonuclease H enzyme(an endoribonuclease), not by exonuclease enzyme.
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@user-fs9dp1dl5o
5 months ago
very good good vidio better than my seventh year physics chemistry manual, thanks for the very enriching video
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@WiemAB
4 months ago
you saved generations
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@saaniyahsajed1932
2 years ago
watched this in honors bio and ap bio in high school, and now coming back to it in genetics in college. og vid!
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@nainshiraman9208
2 years ago
Thank you so much now i honestly understand replication ️️
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@vaibhavsurkute9333
2 years ago
This animation helps me a lot ,,,, THANK YOU
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@aarikanjumsnigdho5688
2 months ago
Watching from Uttara, Dhaka, Bangladesh🇧🇩
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@shamenkingful
1 year ago
You save my day for this
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1 reply
@irinabains4300
3 years ago
hi, had a few doubts:
1. after binding the primer to the DNA strand, the primase leaves the spot, and DNA polymerase iii takes the same spot to start adding the free DNA nucleotides?
2. on which strand do the following take place first or do the following processes take place simultaneously (as there is one molecule of enzyme allocated for each strand?) on both the strands?
a) exonuclease removing the RNA nucleotides/primers
b) DNA polymerase I adding DNA nucleotides in place of the primers
c) Primase adding primers
d) polymerase III adding free DNA nucleotides
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@jamesdemma8489
2 years ago
Can I please get the contact information for the lady who is narrating this amazing video?
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@nuhenessakall599
3 years ago
animasyon için çok teşekkür ederim. bir konuyu anlamada görsel iletilerin önemi çok büyük, sayenizde daha iyi anlayabiliyorum.
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@MixatAAA
3 months ago
Awesome video thank you so much!
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@sinisajeev197
2 years ago
Thank u so much
Ur video really explained me the topic very well with 3-4 min
Perfect animation and explanation
Congratulations!
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@adventuresoflife486
2 years ago
We know RNA has Uracil but no Thymine... So in DNA replication after the primase enzyme act and makes the RNA primer will it have thymine and where will the Uracil go?
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@mohabeno3459
2 months ago
such a great explanation
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@VSJ20237
2 years ago
This is very clear to understand...
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@sticker1362
6 months ago
U r just perfect
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@avantikadas2516
2 years ago
Very informative...I wanna share this in my college group
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1 reply
@r_pydatascience
1 year ago
I am not sure how the RNA primers of the okazaki fragment works. RNA has Uracil but not DNA. Does this RNA primer includes Uracil in its chain? If so, how is it able to connect with the lagging strand of DNA?
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@labibahmed7483
1 year ago (edited)
I wish i saw it earlier ..great explanation
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@legitdude2744
2 years ago
AMAZING THANK YOU SO MUCH I ACED BY BIO EXAM
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@savvy1500
2 years ago
If I'm not mistaken, DNA polymerase on Okazaki fragments bites out the primer when it makes a new fragment ...
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@user-gl8qx2jm7p
1 month ago
Bhala hela au tike bhala heitha nta
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@yashpandey538
1 year ago
I have a genuine question now: why can the DNA polymerase bind directly to the lagging strand to fill in the gaps of Okazaki fragments but it requires an RNA primer when it is polymerizing the coding strand? why is no primer required for the 2nd case?
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@jaswanthreddy-jk1bq
8 months ago
thanks a lot for making it easy !
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@taramia5942
2 months ago
I was totally unconscious about the DNA replication hypothesis before seeing this video cause our professor was unable to discuss it easily.
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@xoxo_fr
1 year ago
How beautifuly you teach mam.
I am your biggest admirer ️
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@aimanreyaz4296
2 years ago
This is too much complicated but after seeing this now it's became easear to understand
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@prajjawalpratyush3433
6 months ago
When you have 2 hours left for exams...
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@deobeesie369
2 years ago
This 3D animation is actually so cute, lol
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@lucienkennedy1997
1 year ago
At 2:55 you said the Exonuclease is removing the RNA-primers and that's actually wrong - it's the Endonuclease that's doing that.
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@raspberrymed580
3 years ago
Excellent explanation. Better than the university!
Reply
@holidaypunk
1 year ago
Fabulous Visualisation
DNA Sequencing - 3D
yourgenome
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1,274,462 views Sep 28, 2016 3D animations
This 3D animation shows the basic steps in the method of DNA sequencing that was used during the Human Genome Project.
For more information, please view the video and explore related resources on our site: http://www.yourgenome.org/video/dna-s...
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Animated by Polymime Animation Company Ltd.
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yourgenome
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435 Comments
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@ShukraanLife
6 years ago
For those who didn't understand: Even though the terminator bases are added randomly, the process is repeated enough times that there are multiple copies of each length strands and all possible length of strands are produced enough times. As a result, when the electrophoresis is finally done the strands get arranged in short to long order, the last/terminator base of each strand marking the end of each strand. Thus when you put together the end base of each strand, you get the original sequence of that original piece of dna. (Remember the beginning portion of each length strand here is always the same because the primer binds to a specific location only, so the produced strands will look like this hypothetically: ATT< ATTC< ATTCG< ATTCGT etc.)
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49 replies
@matsreinderink4994
5 years ago
Biology would be a lot easier if we didn't have DNA.
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50 replies
@goldenmeerkats7401
4 years ago
Whoever came through and made this vid is a g straight up
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@donnam4730
4 years ago
Do you know how long I've been looking for this explanation? 3 hours!
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4 replies
@THE______TRUTH
6 years ago
Damn, that's the best explanation I've seen of this.
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1 reply
@haroonrashid5085
5 years ago
Awesome presentation.
These terminator bases are dideoxynucleotides, which lack both hydroxyl groups at 3' and 2' carbons of sugar, and hence can't make phophodiester bond i.e terminate dna synthesis.
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4 replies
@sev.salahshour9965
4 years ago
It was so amazing and interesting. Every time I hesitate about choosing med/bio for my future studies I watch these kinds of videos and get reminded what an amazingly beautiful world this field is.
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1 reply
@vulcanodong
6 years ago
This is my first time to know how to DNA Sequencing. A really smart idea
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@isabellamichaelis9159
7 years ago
PLEASE MAKE MORE VIDEOS THIS JUST SAVED ME ON MY EXAM
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2 replies
@user-ph9lb5ys9s
3 years ago
Thanks a lot...I never understood DNA sequencing in my study life...now, Alhamdulillah, I got it...
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2 replies
@NixSiow
7 years ago
Very nice explanation. Very smart techniques and learnt a lot about DNA sequencing process. Thanks! Looking forward for more of your video.
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@vrashabhsugandhi8224
7 years ago
Very proper 3D presentation an Very nice explanation of Sequencing DNA looking for more Nice videos of Genitics..
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@mdellertson
4 years ago
This process is absolutely brilliant!
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@jenan1687
3 years ago
OMG, thank you!! You simplified it in the best way
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@islang5306
7 years ago
PLEASE MAKE MORE OF THESE THEY ARE REALLY HELPFUL.
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@wallrider4194
1 day ago
3:26 they look like they are so excited to go out on a walk through the capillary tube!
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@mwangas9529
1 year ago
Perfect explanation of DNA sequence by far
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@juliorosales3257
4 years ago
This is beautiful!
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@lolo-ex9gu
1 year ago
It helped me a lot this type of animation take a very short time,and preventing us from learning....so many books...in less time I understand more things
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@ShukraanLife
6 years ago
THANK YOU! Your channel has probably the best videos explaining these things. Please make more
Reply
yourgenome
·
3 replies
@foal111
2 years ago
this is god level work. Its mind boggling how scientists have come thus far and developed the tools to discover AND manipulate DNA.
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@manolingz
4 years ago
this is very informative but i am still looking for a much longer and more detailed version of this video. but thanks.
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@keerthir1567
3 years ago
This is explained so well, thank you
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@renshe2906
3 years ago
This video is actually a fucking godsend thank you yourgenome for making this video, and I will give thanks for future bio students, God speed.
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@tara638
5 years ago
Ok this just saved me for my exam thank u
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@soemoethuwin6116
7 years ago
very nice explanation about DNA sequencing
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@arielleaiken
6 years ago
awesome video.
quick question: if the terminator bases are added randomly by the polymerase enzyme, how does lining up the DNA by length (using electrophoresis) with the terminator bases on the end get the DNA to be arranged in the original sequence?
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11 replies
@nishakhalid459
4 years ago
Waiting for more videos....nicely explained
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@DanyalShabirr
3 years ago
THIS IS WHAT SMART STUDY ACTUALLY LOOKS LIKE.
THANKS BUDDY
WHEREVER YOU ARE I HOPE YOU WILL BE ALRIGHT.
AGAIN, THANKS FOR THIS WONDERFUL MASTERPIECE.
THIS IS WHAT YOUTUBE WAS ACTUALLY MEANT FOR.
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@DarkCarbunkle
5 years ago
Also, how are the phosphate-ATCG pairs targeted? Is it broken randomly? The video makes it appear as though specific sections are targeted. What chemical breaks these DNA strands into sections, that can be removed completely from the chemical solution and won't adulterate the sample?
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@asmaasif4858
2 months ago
أنا مهتم جدًا بعلم الوراثة ولكني أجد صعوبة في دراسة الحمض النووي. لقد جعلت مقاطع الفيديو الخاصة بك الأمر سهلاً للغاية بالنسبة لي. شكرًا. يرجى الاستمرار في إنشاء المحتوى الخاص بك
Reply
@ojasvaraj6036
5 years ago
Well, then it would still read as a single base. The gel differentiates the fragments by size. And since we have already fixed the starting point, each fragment would have the same starting base. But the the terminating base has a very small chance of occurring at the same spot(probability or something). The result will be something like this: the shortest fragment will be the one having a terminating base pair adjacent to the primer. The second shortest will have a terminator base second next to the primer and so on.
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@davidenriqu6463
8 months ago
But in the sequencing part, they also take the plasmid sequence according to the video. Wouldn't that affect the genome data that you want to sequence?
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@fatmahani8002
6 years ago
wow wow wow that is just amazing
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@wallrider4194
1 day ago
This is so nostalgic.
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@ren7068
5 years ago
this is just so freaking cool
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@manuelsokolov
1 year ago
So, If I understand correctly.
1. Cut DNA by pieces and add each piece to a sample of DNA (plasmid)
2. Pass each piece that was added with plasmid DNA to a bacteria that would multiply. (How do we not get repeated copies that we don't need where?)
3. Add free DNA bases (A,C,T,G), DNA Polimerase, DNA primer and modified DNA bases that will act as terminator basis
4. Then we raise the temperature to 90 for the spiral to spilt in two (like PCR) and then low again we split so that DNA primer can connect and the free DNA basis connect, until it finds a stop sequence in which it adds the modified terminator basis. (How are we keeping the sequence here? Aren't we combining two things that we created, the DNA primer and the plasmid DNA?)
5. Then we raise the temperature again so that we can split the sequence that we just found. And then repeat process 4, 5 for many times.(Again... Aren't we getting repeated sequences?)
6. Apply electroforesis in order to split these sequences by size.
7. Then we get all the sequences and use a laser to light up the terminating base. And save all the basis that light up, this way we get the sequence. ( Why do we only save the terminating base and not the sequence? And how are we sequencing a person DNA if we are keeping one terminating for each gene sequence found?)
Added some questions for each phase in brackets. Hope that might be also other people questions.
Best Regards,
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@gunning6407
6 years ago
To the interested student, the following statement is misleading: "Inserted into plasmid, and then put into bacterial cells". While Bacterial Artificial Chromosomes [1] have been used in many large-scale sequencing projects, including the Human Genome Project, they certainly aren't mandatory. A small chunk of DNA can be directly sequenced via the Sanger method, and a whole genome can be sequenced via a shotgun method ("next gen sequencing"); in either of these cases, no plastid is used.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bacterial_artificial_chromosome
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@Evelyn-nw8nf
4 years ago
Excellent video! Keep it up!
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@ajsbusinesses8546
1 year ago
Love it. Well explained
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@ComandaKronikk
5 years ago
For anyone who wants to know the chemical modification of the terminator bases they're modified by removing the 3'OH group so it cant bond with the 5' phosphate group. These are also known as Di-deoxynucleotides (DDNTs)
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@nofurtherwest3474
4 years ago
Why does temperature stimulate the dna to act as such? And how did they figure that out?
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@k2l6nator
5 years ago
wait, how do you get the whole piece of DNA, if it only reads the terminators color, not the rest of the chunk
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@shaistajabeen1206
3 years ago
Nice and very effective presentation
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@shrutiverma6508
1 year ago
Beautiful video... Excellent !!!!!BRAVO!!!!
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@daxeshpatel2708
6 years ago
Can you tell me which specific sequence you have used for animation?
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@pitkamatka
2 years ago
Are the fragments amplified using PCR? She talks only about heating and cooling, but does not mention if it's the PCR technique or some other.
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@deeksha1207
2 years ago (edited)
Well, that was so clever technique.
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@aqua3890
7 months ago
Yes, but why do we want to know sequences of last terminator base in the order of shortest to longest dna fragments? Isn't that random?
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@hansyuan4116
4 years ago
when was this video made? although the quality is great, there is no need for the DNA to be inserted into a plasmid... just use PCR!!!
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@DheerajPrakaash
6 years ago (edited)
Why are only the terminal bases read by the detector? What happens to the rest of the fragment? Doesn't somehow make sense to me. Isn't every nucleotide supposed to be detected by fluorescence and then joined to be read as a whole sequence?
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@amanaparbin4390
2 years ago
Thank you so much for this vdo it's so easy and interesting way of teaching thank you ️
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@GinaMK09
5 months ago
Apologies for the naive question, but this way won't you just get the base of the terminators, rather than the full sequence of each fragment? what about the unlabelled bases?
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@cudicudio109
5 years ago
FINALLLLLY I UNDERSTOOD THE SHIT!! THANKS ALOT
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@seanstars6637
6 years ago
fantastic video
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@adamahmed7152
3 years ago
By this way didn't we sequence the placmid and the fragment of DNA together because I see the DNA polymerase putting the nucleotides away from the fragment of DNA?
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@mominurrahman6943
2 months ago (edited)
If the laser is detecting only the terminator nucleotide, then how we can get the information of other nucleotides of the same primer?
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@13thskardovian57
6 years ago
thanks ......good job.......
God bless you
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@arthunter92
4 years ago
Well that was a more complicated process than I was expecting...
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@kaavyasri2705
2 weeks ago
From where we get DNA polymerase? What does it consist of? Whatever fragment, A-C and G-C alone must pair, if so, which specific sequence held responsible for specific trait in a species (size, colour, position of organ, feeling, emotions, IQ,....)?
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@harunaisayaro6287
6 years ago
wow very nice explanation.
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@anast456
1 year ago
this was very clear and helpful thank you so much.<3333333
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@aaa_9090
4 years ago
May you continue to add Arabic translation to these amazing videos . Thank you very much .
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@awesomeiMike
6 years ago
Thanks! I was curious how a machine can read the DNA. One question: if the DNA is cut into small pieces, how do you know what's the correct order when it's put together into one piece again? You said it goes from the shortest to the longest but that's not necessarily the original order is it?
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@vanchray6106
2 years ago
well explained........good job
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@NedumEze
2 years ago
Sweetly narrated. But please, is it true that the Terminators are positioned at 10, 6, 5, 6 strand ends?
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@derrickopoku3425
3 years ago
Very useful information. Thanks.
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@cantin8697
1 year ago (edited)
How do you know the size of each strand?
Say there's a small code - AGGCT
The machine reads 1-strand (A), 2-strand (G), 2-strand (G), 2-strand (G), 2-strand (G), 3-strand (G), 4-strand (C)... Would the machine say that the genetic code is AGGGGGC? Or do strands of the same length cross the laser at around the same time compared to the other strands so you would tell by the speed that the blocks were being produced (e.g. A long pause GGGG long pause G long pause C)?
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@abdelrahmanosama5850
3 years ago
We get sequence of terminal base only of each fragment!!
What about the reminder of the fragment?
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@mikeodiwuor5446
1 year ago
So if we record the colors of the fluorescing terminator, how then do we know the previous unlabelled nucleotides?
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@ves7y775
5 months ago
much more clear than my biochem professor
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@colloredbrothers
5 years ago
This video isn't entirely clear to me, when polymerase creates 5 base pairs and puts a terminator at the end of it, how can this sequence of base pairs be converted to a single nucleotide letter when being read? There's a whole lot of information missing from this video and it doesn't make a lick of sense. When the pieces are filtered by size and read out how is the sequence of dna maintained?
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@FarhanAli-qs6dh
3 years ago
Nice video... good job guys
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@yatagan1
6 years ago
Thank you. this was really really good animation. i learned a lot, thank you :)
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@maggotmeatballz2692
3 years ago
"Before we start sequencing the DNA it has to be cut in smalled pieces" yet give no explanation as to how do we obtain this DNA, where is it? How is it isolated or is it isolated? And how is it "cut" in smaller pieces, with tiny scissors?
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@TheZenytram
4 years ago
i guess for smaller length of the fragment there will be countless copy, but isn't it possible skip some fragment's length if it is long enought ???? cuz the probability to reach there will be realy low so you could heppen to have the fragment with length 1,000,000,000,000 and the next 1,000,000,000,002,
and how can you differentiate 2 or more frangment that is next to each other with diferent length but the same terminator base??? like the sequency for the length 1, 2, 3, 4 be AAAA, but it will be thousands of copy for each one.
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1 reply
@polokocollen7072
6 years ago
great vid.
1
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@techwithdipufrom0ton621
2 years ago
Who should get their DNA sequenced? I read books of Yuval Noah Harari and he suggests to get our own DNA sequenced. Do you know why?
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@muhammadkhidr1807
1 year ago (edited)
This method is called sanger method
But nanopore method is much easier to understand and does not require fragmenting or replication.
1
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@amjaddurra5454
9 months ago
Admirable
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@evgenia
5 years ago
For those who still do not understand. Shortest one will be Primer code- Terminator (first base). Second shortest will be Primer code- Base X- Terminator (Second base). Third one Primer code- BASE X-BASE Y- Terminator (Third base.)
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@johnhammer8668
4 years ago
How did they prove that all cells have same sequence ? What if there is a very small change in some of the cells. ?
1
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@ozguntoy7230
3 years ago
how do they produce spesific primers?
1
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@christiananipolli4399
5 years ago
Also how are the primers chosen?
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@buzhichun
5 years ago
I get how you can get a copy from all elements the complete DNA strand, in order, using the terminators, but how does this deal with duplicates?
I can imagine that purely by chance multiple strands of n elements might be formed, which will appear together in a group when reading them in with the laser. How do you know these are actually identical when you only have a single terminator at one end? If there was some second indicator to get the strand length you could just throw away all but one strands of the same size but I don't see anything like that in this animation. So how do they do that?
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3 replies
@ayeshaarshad95439
4 months ago
The primer is always the same (10 bases) but the count of free basis is always different. In this video, one string has 11 bases added to it, another has 12... etc. and it goes up and up. By that technique you can read part of the original sequence because of the terminator bases,
@May04bwu kindly explain this a bit more
Reply
@hugozarcotapia238
2 years ago
excelent presentation and very didactic
Reply
@taiaxen7157
1 year ago
Cool video brother
Reply
@paigestrudwick3914
6 years ago
Hi would it be ok for me to please use a snippet of this video for a project I am working on regarding the associated bacteria of coral reefs and how this might help them respond to climate change??
Thanks
Paige
3
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yourgenome
·
1 reply
@philidor9657
1 year ago
Man, that's super clever. There are some smart muh fuckin cookies out there.
Reply
@nareshbarik5384
2 weeks ago
Thank you
1
Reply
@nisrinejarmoune6415
1 year ago
Really genius!!!!!! WOOOOOOOOW
Reply
@AnishaPramanik
2 years ago
Helped me a lot
Reply
@wallrider4194
1 day ago (edited)
2:06 “so you have chosen death”
1
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@adonissakellariou6051
2 years ago
1. how do you know the primer sequence if you're very objective using the primer is to find out the nucleotide sequences? 2. how can you read the nucleotides after modified nucleotides if the RNA polymerase stops as soon as it puts down the modified nucleotide e.g if the modified ATCG are all placed with base pairs left to be read? 3. how can the nonmodified nucleotides that are placed down before the modified ones be read, there is only a max of 4 modified nucleotides total in all tubes so if a sequence isn't just one of each base pair then a nonmodified nucleotide is placed and cant be read
Reply
1 reply
@johnz5425
6 years ago
Very helpful, just adding, some experiment lab tend to use PCR first instead of bacteria transport. Just another method, mentioned in my textbook but doesn't matter anyway.
2
Reply
@AnkitSingh-fu6rm
2 months ago
i don't have biology but after watching this i feel like a Doctor and probaby can treat cancer now.
Reply
@AnungAriwibowo
4 years ago
Why in the first place the original DNA must be cut into shorter pieces?
1
Reply
@jesusmartin5806
6 years ago
I have never studied biology, but this vid is so awesome that even i understand it.
It amazes me the huge waste of resources needed to get this task done.
1
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1 reply
@saigonmonopoly1105
1 year ago
Why are the primary dna sounds like an exact sync with the blood type?
Reply
@eh2288
4 years ago
shouldnt temperature as high as 60*C denaturate the dna polimarase? cause its a protein so it seems like a little too much
Reply
@crapschamp9986
3 years ago
Whats the stock ticker symbol of this company? and current stock price.
Reply
@umairkhattak2027
4 years ago
Good jobe
1
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@lguezzar6837
3 years ago
Wouldn't it be more simple to just use nucleotids that are color marked and that aren't terminators so we get a strand of DNA that is all color marked and we can then visualize it ?
1
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@arindamdas6363
11 months ago
God make this creation so geniously, he is the greatest scientist,doctor and engineer
Reply
@ishkibable
5 years ago
Very cool, although seems quite inefficient, but then again I guess we're not fully in the nanotech/biotech age just yet
Reply
@marks6198
4 years ago (edited)
Down below is basically what you get in the end, the process is done so many times that you get millions of strands all lined up from shortest to longest, increasing in size one base at a time. So then you can know the sequence of the full strand.
(The O's are bases you don't need to know, its only the end bases that they detect)
OOOOA
OOOOOT
OOOOOOC
OOOOOOOG
OOOOOOOOA
So the strand would be ATCGA...keep going so on so on
Reply
@Fuzzybeanerizer
5 years ago (edited)
Am I correct that in real life the DNA fragments of a given length will be very numerous in the capillary tube, something like a large school of tiny fish all swimming abreast, and with substantial separation from those schools of fish that are longer or shorter? It seems like this would be necessary (or at least very helpful) in detecting the fluorescent light color, to have a lot of molecules together vs. trying to detect the feeble light of one lone molecule. It seems like the production of a lot of fragments of each length is something that is bound to happen, since the bacteria produced "lots and lots" of copies of the original DNA. Those identical copies would all be getting sequenced at the same time, and even a single one of them would eventually turn out multiple DNA fragments of each possible length in this random process, provided the heating/cooling cycles were repeated enough times. I suppose the large quantity of copies of the original DNA section produced by the bacteria help reduce the number of heating/cooling cycles required down to a practical figure, as that cycling must be a bit time consuming. This video could stand to be a lot longer and more detailed... for example the average person is not going to know what a plasmid is, and the common starting point for each fragment produced needs to be emphasized more. Also, since this is just one section of the total DNA strand to begin with, how is this information mated up in the proper place with other sections sequenced separately? I presume the sections have enough overlap at each end to provide an essentially unique matching combination of DNA bases? Well, I'm a machinist... don't ask me.
1
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1 reply
@christiananipolli4399
5 years ago
But how do ther differentiate between two strands that are the same lenght and those who are not?How do they know that the next terminator base is really the next DNA base or just another copy of the previous base?
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1 reply
@World19881
4 years ago
Good video lady. Thanks
Reply
@TheJoshtheboss
4 months ago
But how come they travel as single strains. Won't they be double stranded after PCR?
Reply
@poojanirmal8765
2 years ago
This 4.5 min video is more effective than 4.5 hr lecturer.
Reply
@karlacolman982
2 years ago
So, if someone could help me understand, I'm confused by this: doesn't this just sequence the terminator nucleotides? And if that's the case, then wouldn't that not tell us anything about the DNA strand at all except a random sequence of terminator nucleotides?
1
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1 reply
@javierborda8684
3 years ago
Mind-blowing. Question: the sequence or "queue" of billions of fragments has to be absolutely perfect. Am I wrong? if not, how would such level of perfect alignment be achieved?
1
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1 reply
@AbdulHanan-mc7pk
3 years ago
Well done
Reply
@aymanAyman-og5qr
5 years ago
راقي شرحج حجيه
Reply
@vetsaabhishek4806
3 years ago
Very nice explanation
Reply
@zaaboulla82
4 years ago
what is dna sequencing used for ?
Reply
@tunetonic04
1 year ago
Well explained
Reply
@pranavomesh4103
4 years ago
Good animation
Reply
@armandoes
6 years ago
Why didnt you talk about PCR for amplification?
Reply
@marshallgraves6148
1 year ago
If you cut up a bunch of DNA and do this in different bacteria populations, how do you organize the different sequences and put them all together at the end? Also, how do you cut up the DNA anyway?
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1 reply
@ragini.gupta.3171
5 years ago
thx for this video
Reply
@umairkhattak2027
4 years ago
Weldone
1
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@doctorscalling9479
2 years ago
Welp this is not the DNA sequencing we're learning but glad there are other methods of reading the code.
Reply
@zacharyferraro19
5 years ago
Yo whats good!!!
2
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@user-xd4ie8hh1e
3 months ago
This vedio really very useful
Reply
@ravneetkaur3100
3 years ago
i have a question what if two terminator bases stop at same lengths .... whole order will become wrong if both are read
1
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3 replies
@DarkCarbunkle
5 years ago
How is the DNA isolated from the bacteria, without including bacterial DNA or other chemical substances within the bacteria? Doesn't that add a major source of contamination?
1
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1 reply
@user-oq3hk3vs6y
2 years ago (edited)
I have a question whether this is the Sanger sequence or no ?
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1 reply
@meaadh9163
6 years ago
Wow!
1
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@shafiulismam5334
3 years ago
Mmmhhmmm this is the stuff️
Reply
@YuvaRaj-on8mb
2 years ago
What is use of getting those sequence through colours ... What should we do with that any body tel me
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1 reply
@censura1210
4 years ago
I came here to learn, I'm leaving more confused than ever
5
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@heytheredelilah4174
3 years ago
Is this how the NIH sequenced the human genome?
Reply
@thehaematopathologist
5 years ago
Hi! I found this video very nice..Can I use this in my presentation? I want your permission. Please..
Reply
1 reply
@user-qk5jv4yl9p
4 years ago
great .. nice ,, awesome
Reply
@diptopauldip
4 years ago (edited)
Can someone tell me, What is a DNA primer? is it related with 5' or 3'?
Reply
1 reply
@seemashriwas5284
3 years ago
Very nice
Reply
@sandra25
2 years ago
Someone can tell me the name of this sequencing method
Reply
@Abyie-Ho-dam
5 years ago
Best video ever. Nobel prize
Reply
@patriceclark1680
4 years ago
Best school ever
Reply
@uneeedzuneeedz1683
2 years ago
thank u so much
Reply
@saigonmonopoly1105
1 year ago
Unless they are going together and more than likely have some kind of connection
Reply
@DarkCarbunkle
5 years ago
I mean, sure, you'll say "an enzyme," and the spacing of the enzyme activation sites could arguably connect to and react with base pairs, but then you run into the problem of targeting again. AT - CG. That's it, 2 pairs, of two relative orientations, which doesn't affect whether or not the enzyme will connect. So, why isn't every AT or CG being split, as an enzyme can react with multiple substances. You're not, by this logic, removing "chains" or what one would consider a "subsection" (as displayed), you're basically dissolving it. Pairs should be split in much smaller subsections, every one of them, arguably.
Reply
yourgenome
·
1 reply
@konitixx
3 years ago
Woow c trop beau
Reply
@ingabiresolange6469
3 years ago
Thank you
Reply
@frankservant5754
4 years ago
How did they figure this out
2
Reply
1 reply
@areej0530
2 years ago
thank you
Reply
@rockingsaviero8944
3 years ago
Best ️
Reply
@turtlesovertrains3667
9 months ago
I just still don't understand how the primer knows where to bind with the plasmid dna instead of just binding somewhere that has the same sequence
Reply
1 reply
@brandonmcclain9988
2 years ago
So interesting, about to engineer one to the tee in minecraft.
Reply
@pandapa2415
7 years ago
peeeeerrrffffecttt!!!
1
Reply
@taslim3650
5 years ago
What if there are repeated length ???
Reply
@fatemamariom3050
5 years ago
can you make clear electroforesis
Reply
@drd6482
1 year ago
yeahboi 100%
2
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@AsifIqbal-xx2st
4 years ago
v will only about the labellled bases not normal how will v know the sequence of the normal dna i mean orgnl dna?
Reply
@SheikhN-bible-syndrome
3 years ago
How do you know if any of this is actually happening when no one can even visually see what DNA looks like?
1
Reply
2 replies
@user-kn8ru9wp1l
2 years ago
Thanks️
Reply
@dunnuthalayellareddy7618
3 years ago
Thank you mam
Reply
@drd6482
1 month ago
NOT TED TALK BUT PRETTY GOOD #PCRbetter? #biscuits #triplerainbow
2
Reply
1 reply
@dl1141
1 year ago
PACB is the most accurate gene sequencing technology in the world today according to Chatgpt.
Reply
@Ashna.sawa22
1 year ago
Thanks
Reply
@cherry2151
8 months ago
What's it's use
1
Reply
@danielstacey2660
4 years ago
Is this "Sanger sequencing"?
1
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1 reply
@jdzspace33
5 years ago
I still don't get it fully. This helped a lot, but the end lost me. If each strand is made up of different lengths of base pairs. They why is the whole strand assigned a letter based on the terminator bases? It looks like they took a chain of bonds, and titled it with a single letter. How does this determine anything other than the chain of terminator bases and not the entire chain of each strand?
Reply
3 replies
@AsifIqbal-xx2st
4 years ago
this will help u know only the bases labelled....what about the DNA behind them means what about other bases anyone kindly
Reply
@vanessa-ul7nj
4 years ago
is this just not pcr?
Reply
@Xphy
3 years ago
Woow Thnks
Reply
@chaimaae8683
6 years ago
Thnx;)))
1
Reply
@user-wr1wb8uz2t
5 months ago
Make video on prokaryotic transcription and translation plez
Reply
@GOATMENTATOR
3 years ago
thats crazy
Reply
@SinanAkkoyun
3 years ago
What the frick, how?? How do you know that not the same length of strand has been produced twice? Or that every length of strand has been produced??
1
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1 reply
@nobudytj2631
2 years ago
Tnaks a lot
Reply
@Ray4rafia
2 years ago
Terminator end lacks 3' end so nothing can add further
Reply
@callummcandrew5992
4 years ago
I don't understand?
The goal of DNA sequencing is to read the nitrogenous bases and how they pair up with others. This is not reading the bases at all, it is reading only 1 single terminator base. What about all the other bases that are connected behind it? they are not being read?
Reply
1 reply
@iwantlee9510
4 years ago
This seems like the old way of doing it. Aren't DNA-fragments just copied using Taq-polymerase now, instead of bacteria?
Reply
1 reply
@malihafatima836
4 years ago
This is same as pcr what the difference i cannot understand
Reply
@konitixx
3 years ago
Vive la France 🇫🇷
Reply
@yashasvisaxena9112
3 years ago
Nice video but can't we simply see this through an electron microscope
Reply
@Krugmaster
2 years ago
Isn't that method outdated by now?
Reply
@mustafashebgo7816
5 years ago
منور ياعبدالله بشين
1
Reply
@jasonsmith8210
3 years ago
You are telling me they do this for billions of sequences for one dna test?
Reply
@juanmf
2 years ago
This does not make sense. Any fragment can end in any letter. Impossible to align later with single letter reads.
1
Reply
1 reply
@nour..777
10 months ago
سبحان الله العظيم
Reply
@skepticprobe
2 years ago
So how does this look like in real life? Do you have videos? Come on now, we're in the 21st century, if there are no microscopes available to show it on video these days then how do the scientists who study all this see it?
Reply
1 reply
@markkjohnson4815
4 years ago
How the fuck did our species got to this point? Seems like yesterday that a wheel would blow everyone's mind
Reply
@saigonmonopoly1105
1 year ago
If there are two of what ever be it who cares find the third clue and chances are you gonna see what ever it is lurking under
Reply
@debahutibhattacharjee7095
4 years ago
Reply
@konitixx
3 years ago
OK man
Reply
@konitixx
3 years ago
style
Reply
@julius6674
3 years ago
why are they using bacteria and not pcr
Reply
1 reply
@Ayubinho
2 years ago
Isn’t this Sanger sequencing
Reply
@saigonmonopoly1105
1 year ago
It what a gambler does
Reply
@beastali7869
3 years ago
Why the DNA polymerase look like doo doo though?
Reply
@villezki
2 years ago
YO-kokeeseen harjoittelen
Reply
@gavinpd4131
3 years ago
So no one’s talking about the pickle bacteria at 0:28?
Reply
@patriceclark1680
4 years ago
C looks like purple instead of blue
Reply
@alfishaakram5234
2 years ago (edited)
It helped me a lot this type of animation take a very short time,and preventing us from learning....so many books...in less time I understand more things
6
Reply
@rayanhago3540
6 years ago
woooow very nice
1
Reply
@saigonmonopoly1105
1 year ago
I don’t know but coincidence is not a good idea
Reply
@user-dw3qd7pj6l
7 months ago
دكتوره هبه نفتهم عليه احسن
Reply
@jayd1877
3 years ago
I still don’t get it.
Reply
@drd6482
2 years ago
Ilectrophoresis #eulogy #happyfriday #rubberducks
2
Reply
1 reply
@aloxen_
4 years ago
WhO iS wAtChInG 2020 ?
1
Reply
@williammartinezmorillo5235
1 month ago
secuencia ADN
Reply
@iremtysz
4 years ago
Türkçe altyazı olsuunn
Reply
@akhilkatpally4188
4 years ago
Sounds like cool story .... i am still wondering is that really possible
Reply
1 reply
@ashleighdowling8266
4 years ago
why does the sequence need to be replicated at the start through bacteria?
Reply
1 reply
@konitixx
3 years ago
Je ne comprends pas
Reply
@sunitachate8913
5 years ago
nice vedio who any unable to emagine how it's happens see this vedio
Reply
@ridhibansal2251
2 years ago
Who are here after 3's a crowd
Reply
@Ten8sious
4 years ago
oh shit, im not smart lol
Reply
@bhvbhvn5265
9 months ago
ما شاء الله
ان لم تكتب ما شاء الله فأعلم ان الشيطان منعك
Reply
@iankelly6632
1 year ago
#Evolution did it
Reply
@ethanharrison9452
2 years ago
keith was ere 2k22
Reply
1 reply
@c2h2c2h210
4 years ago
we need to develop better methods...
Reply
@user-pu2lt5nd7t
2 years ago
انتي بتقولي ايه انتي
Reply
@mubeenajasif8775
3 years ago
Mubeena
Reply
@let4be
4 years ago
Not really well explained, from what's been said here it's unclear how they match those colors to the actual letters in correct order. It's also unclear what kind of errors there might be and what they do to fix this.
1
Reply
@leowan7401
3 years ago
Wesh les potes
Reply
@hotchocolate4life.
1 year ago
PCR
Reply
@kahraman7807
2 years ago
Turkish translate please.
Reply
@1.4142
2 years ago
That seems slow
Reply
@user-qc7xp3ek6r
2 years ago
it's me mariooooooooooooooooooooooo
Reply
@aliiibouakez2411
7 years ago
is this the sanger method
Reply
1 reply
@mikep608
1 year ago
Bullsh_t. and I say this as an engineer.
Reply
@vytaszv8163
1 month ago
it looks like fraud to me...
CENTRAL DOGMA: FROM DNA TO PROTEINS 🧬💡
Biotech Made Easy
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53,442 views Jan 16, 2023 THE CENTRAL DOGMA OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
By McGraw Hill Videos
HOW PROTEINS ARE MADE?
#transcription #translation #molecularbiology #centraldogma #dna #mrna #protein
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THE CENTRAL DOGMA OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Biotech Made Easy
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Biotech Made Easy
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rongmaw lin
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@user-qe3gk9ur2s
6 days ago
Brilliant. This has sharpened my understanding of dogma theory of protein synthesis
1
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Biotech Made Easy
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1 reply
@nadhiraayudia9310
2 weeks ago
After seeing this video my insight has increased, thank you and keep up the good work
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Biotech Made Easy
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@addawithswarnali
2 months ago
Wow
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Biotech Made Easy
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@thedoctor8301
13 days ago
Now I don't have more questions in my mind, thanks so much
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Biotech Made Easy
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@AbisDen
1 month ago
Amazing video. Thank you
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Biotech Made Easy
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@3lm_
2 weeks ago
Thank you habibi
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Biotech Made Easy
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@mr.bucky6428
2 weeks ago
thanku
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Biotech Made Easy
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@cosmoleooo
2 months ago
this is amazing thx for the video, helps a lot
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@user-ib6fm2bu9c
2 months ago
Great job
Love from Pakistan
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@TM-mu3pr
3 weeks ago
0:40
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@avik5696
13 days ago
did you make this video
DNA and RNA - Transcription
Nucleus Biology
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311,931 views Mar 21, 2022 #mRNA #RNA #RNAtranscription
#RNAtranscription #mRNA #RNA
SCIENCE ANIMATION TRANSCRIPT: Now, that we've covered DNA replication, let's talk about Transcription. The first thing you need to know is that transcription has nothing to do with cell replication processes, such as DNA replication, mitosis, or cell division. So what is transcription and why is it necessary? Well, transcription is the first step in the process of using the genetic code in DNA to synthesize or build all the different proteins in your body. One problem with synthesizing these proteins is that the instructions for making them are in the DNA, which is located inside the nucleus. But the place proteins are always made is outside the nucleus, either in the ribosomes floating in the cytoplasm, or in the ribosomes embedded in the rough endoplasmic reticulum. So, how does the genetic code for synthesizing proteins get from the DNA to the ribosome? DNA uses a messenger called messenger RNA or mRNA to carry the genetic code from the nucleus to the ribosome. The process of building this messenger RNA is called Transcription. Now, let's see how transcription happens. Transcription begins when an enzyme called RNA polymerase attaches to a segment of DNA called a gene. A gene contains the code to build a specific protein, which is a macromolecule made up of a sequence of amino acids in a specific order. And within a gene, the specific order of nitrogenous bases dictates the order of amino acids that will make up the protein. Each group of three consecutive bases in the gene is actually a code for a particular amino acid. As a result, each group is referred to as a codon. RNA polymerase causes a particular area of the DNA helix to unwind and separate into two strands. One of the strands, often called the template strand, is the side of DNA that is read or transcribed by the messenger RNA. The other strand of DNA, often called the non-template strand, isn't transcribed by the messenger RNA. So how are DNA instructions transcribed into messenger RNA? Well, using the template strand as a guide, RNA polymerase uses the base pair rule to assemble free nucleotides in the nucleus into a complementary strand of RNA. For example, RNA polymerase reads the DNA base thymine on the template strand then binds it to a free nucleotide containing adenine. This process continues with cytosine binding to guanine and guanine binding with cytosine. Remember though, RNA will never contain thymine. So, whenever RNA polymerase sees adenine on the DNA template strand, it pairs adenine with uracil. By using the template strand of DNA as a guide, the genetic code from the non-template strand of DNA has actually been transcribed into messenger RNA. When transcription is complete, the messenger RNA, which is small enough to fit through a nuclear pore, takes the genetic code out of the nucleus to the ribosome, the site of protein synthesis. The process of actually building the protein at the ribosome is called Translation, which we'll cover in a separate video. To summarize, transcription is the process of transcribing or copying the genetic code for building a protein into messenger RNA. A gene is a segment of DNA containing the instructions or code for building a protein. A codon is a group of three consecutive nitrogenous bases in a gene containing the code for a specific amino acid in a protein. RNA polymerase unwinds the strands of DNA in a gene. The template DNA strand contains the complementary bases that need to be read to generate messenger RNA. The base pair rule is followed when assembling messenger RNA. Messenger RNA is actually a copy of the DNA non-template strand with uracil substituted for thymine.
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@jennyle5256
5 months ago
RIP you helped me through my years in highschool and without you, i wouldn't even know where to start. RIP young soul
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@HanInHarmony
5 months ago
This has been one of the most informative, helpful videos I have ever seen. Thank you!
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@AIAA.xyz.4
1 year ago
You made things so simple and clear literally I'm mind blown?? I'm going to go around recommending this video to everyone. Thank you so much
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@MartaAnderson-ly5hf
1 year ago
Your videos on DNA, RNA & protein synthesis are SAVING my life in A&P class, thank you for making this so much easier to understand!!
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@lcdp9459
6 months ago
Quick and simple! Thank you so much. This was very much appreciated.
4
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@carolina_couto11
1 year ago
Hi, I’d really appreciate a video of translation too. This series are very well done and much helpful
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@C_my_community_posts
2 years ago
Thank you so much
Keep uploading such videos ️
May God bless you
1
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@user-zz7nz1ox6m
2 weeks ago
احب أهنئك علا هاذة الشرح الجميل المفصل شرح سريع وباقل وقت وهاذي الي جنت محتاجتة شكراً جزيلاً لك
2
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@wildmuffinx7119
2 years ago
Your videos have inspired me and helped me so much in the subject of science!!
19
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@Radhekrishnn07
1 year ago
We can easily understand biology with animations thank you so much for uploading this intrested videos
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@michaelhumphreys9671
1 year ago
I teach HS biology for 23 years now, and have used many average to good videos (low complexity) about this process, but his one in now the Best! Thank you for making it (and the DNA one). Are you going to create the Translation one (like I think you mentioned)?
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@patriciaberge3145
1 year ago
This video is helpful to use in my class. Do you have a separate Translation video as well?
9
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@saymabagwan8531
7 months ago
Plz make more videos of biology
Plz don't stop
It's very helpful for us
3
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@assassin_0147
7 days ago
Great video. One small thing you missed is that the mRNA formed through transcription receieves a cap of 7-methylguanosine and tail recieves poly-A at the end of the process to protect it from nuclease and phosphatase enzymes in the cytoplasm, after which it goes for translation by ribosomes and tRNA
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@sydneesatcher8808
4 months ago
Literally helped me so much. I have a college Bio Quiz tomorrow and I don't have time to read all the notes tonight. I also have to study for a chem exam tomorrow as well. This vid was fast, simple, and super helpful. Thank you!!!
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@aquibali5444
1 year ago
Please post video of translation also
This series is very much helpful ️
4
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@aasaid69
1 year ago
this is so useful that it needs a translation. Good job with the video
1
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@sulochanahiremath8826
1 year ago
Your videos are Literally awesome.....we never forget concept!!!
Plss do make a video of all the chapters of class 11th biology like this so it would really help us a lot.....
Isn't it guys???? If yes pls do like..
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@BioBloom10M
7 months ago
Well done
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@healthylifewellness
11 months ago
We need more videos ... your videos are very helpful for us please make more
1
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@pwkearjunas769
2 years ago
This is my favourite channel️️
4
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@sage1799
1 year ago
You saved my day!!! thank you!!!
1
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@breadiva7205
1 month ago
These videos are lifesavers
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@hardeepkaur1957
1 year ago
Your videos are so helpful to me
Thankyou so much .
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@AliMuhammad-bk2ml
9 months ago
Plz make more videos regularly..your video are amazing and ver easy to understand
1
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@PlaXer
1 year ago
bro this the best channel ever fr
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@victor7100
10 months ago
Thank you so much,literal life saver
1
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@lxveemily
1 year ago
wonderful video! so easy to understand thank you!
1
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@sudeepadhikari4454
2 years ago
Love you Nucleus Biology
3
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@khatimuauwal5442
1 year ago
Thank you very. Please provide DNA TRANSLATION as you promised in this video. God bless you
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@studylife2918
2 years ago
Thankyou so much
Please keep making these videos
1
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@user-tj1ef3zh4h
1 year ago
we want more videos and quizzes based on biology ncert ️ Love from India
5
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@wanpyndapbiangnongrang1041
1 year ago
Thank you very much for uploading
One request from my side can you please explain in details for the topic of xylem and phloem
2
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@ricardobiogeo
5 months ago
Isn't there a video from the same collection about protein translation?
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@asadrazascienceteacher5705
2 months ago
Greatest one
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@sidahmedsido-he9ke
1 month ago (edited)
than you استاذي شكرا جزيلا algeria
1
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@sonukr8743
1 year ago
#️⃣Great job.& a lots of thanks for it's. Please make a video on how to cell receptors works for binding of any drugs molecules.
2
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@lenociniis6916
1 year ago
Thank uuuuuu sooooo muchhhhhhh I love this channel
2
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@AyshaManzoor-ip3qe
2 months ago
Thankyou, very simply explained
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@HaiderAli-nw1dr
7 months ago
From where do you get this animation
Could you please tell me about animation making
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@anshuranjan6521
11 months ago
@ Nucleus Biology, I want to ask that if uracil comes in place of thyamine in transcription process, does it not affect the code?
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@shanayakhan4145
1 year ago
️️ tnk you so much sir such good and easy teach for us love from India
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@katsay9103
3 weeks ago
Love the simple explanation. DNA translation please
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@MuskanMuskan-co1hc
6 months ago
Please make more videos sir why you stopped making animations
1
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@itsmeayansheikh
1 year ago
Hey, I am waiting for the translation video️
1
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@user-kf7gg9wg5m
1 month ago
Thank you so much but please talk more about genetic code
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@pathirajamanike4973
8 months ago
Thank you soooo much
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@adeenaaijaz9987
1 year ago
Mindblowing
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@user-br3ug2vr9f
5 months ago
I teach virtually and I would love to use your video in my canva presentations during class and embed it in D2L so that students who cannot access youtube can still watch it. Is this possible?
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@mist9100
3 weeks ago
hi i need that translation explanation thank you i love your videos they are very clear and easy to understand
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@hd-lb5rn
1 year ago
THANK YOU
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@basic_ptat6593
10 months ago
Teaching me what i didnt understand or pay attention to during class
1
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@A_kumar.748
10 months ago
Thank you so much
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@imcrazy007
6 months ago
Please comeback sir
2
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@threeds9766
11 months ago
Do you have separate video for translation?
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@iamjest21
2 weeks ago
I can't seem to find the vidoe of Translation here in this channel. Please help
2
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@sherridaniels
2 months ago
Wow this was amazing
1
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1 reply
@Nih-Shabd
2 years ago
Nice info
2
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@Harsh_pokimon.18
1 year ago
Thank you sir ️
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@NEkka-wd4oh
6 months ago
Please make videos in bioinformatics
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@Maheshpanwar
2 years ago
Keep it up you're best doing.
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@secretstudygoal6066
1 year ago
Please make a video on"fine structure of gene"
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@zaidmajeed5292
1 year ago
what software they used for such fascinating videos. anyone know that?
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@safa5722
1 month ago
You are perfect
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@sara.m6059
1 year ago
God bless you
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@mustafafadhil5124
1 year ago (edited)
You made me understood two hours lecturer in five minutes
1
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@healthylifewellness
11 months ago
Please make a video on bioenergetics, enzymes.... please
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@leynettepearldeleon6257
1 year ago
I was scanning all your videos to find translation but there's none :(
1
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@anitaamissah59
8 months ago
Special
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@dishajharaniya4915
7 months ago
Please sir can you give more videos
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@danalawdenski3940
13 days ago
I would love to use this video to help reinforce this content when I teach to my classroom, but you've made your video unavailable off of YouTube! So sad...
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@jennifergervacio6521
7 months ago
Thank you you are so smart :DNA RNA
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@Abdur.Rahman-Raju
8 months ago
Thanks
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@Roxanne10370
1 year ago
Thank you
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@lauragordon6414
1 year ago
What are the green globs that are carrying the codons?
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@generalgrievous9495
10 months ago
I need you
Why you stopped making videos
1
Reply
@arianagowda3992
1 month ago
Do you have a Translation video?
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@lanem455
9 months ago
U said at 2:36 that the template strand is the one being transcribed then at 5:25 u said that mRNA is a copy of the non-template strand how come?
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@noor_alkurdy_
10 months ago
جزاک الله خیرا
1
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@Amantarasa
1 year ago
Pls make more video about genetic
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@user-tj1ef3zh4h
1 year ago
Oh sir, it's been six months, not a single video came, did you all sleep??
1
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@jeanmoise9570
1 year ago
All these processes are present identically in some properties of the numbers systems
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@farougshiyab
3 months ago
Nice and informative video but what we have learnt that the enzyme Helicase is responsable for the unwinding of DNA double helix.
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1 reply
@user-cv5px3bl1m
1 month ago
Translation Please!!!! These videos rule!!!
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@MoradAlemdar-rn9nm
10 months ago
شكرا
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@2023anac
3 months ago (edited)
The non-template strand is the one complementary to the RNA oo
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@ahmedosama9004
10 months ago
Perfect
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@bhanuTomar.
2 years ago
Nice
2
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@nareshkumari7142
1 year ago
Plz make video on translation
1
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@aliseifikarian64
2 years ago
I go for it
1
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@huzaifaahmad5924
2 years ago
Is this step in the G1 phase of cell cycle?
1
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1 reply
@priyankapant2790
8 months ago
How you animate these videos
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@gsmacscreation3718
2 months ago
Please upload the animation of translation and translocation
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1 reply
@nikhy6762
9 months ago
TSM SIR
3
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1 reply
@redraprs8828
4 months ago
thanks 0:10
1
Reply
@leehyeri9863
1 year ago
We need info about blood transport
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@dfshtNm
7 months ago (edited)
Tyt biyo çalışırken karşıma çıkan video dksksksks
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@saiteja142
1 year ago
Looking for "muscle contraction"
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@sourimadatta613
1 year ago
Where is translation ?
1
Reply
@troycollins1037
2 months ago
Doesn’t the helicase unzip the dna though not the polymerase
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1 reply
@Florentine1993
1 year ago
Dear youtuber where is the translation part..
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@emopunkyrocksociety352
1 year ago
What use of burff
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@dr.yashwanthkumarreddyn4212
1 year ago
HOW TO ANIMATE LIKE THIS ?
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@nare2905
1 year ago
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@humerxa
1 year ago
Where's translation?
1
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@bhuvanasreereddy8357
1 year ago
Sir translation vedio plz
1
Reply
@anitaamissah59
8 months ago
Special 1:25
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@pixumogaming1881
11 months ago
I understood only 1 thing that SCIENCE WILL BE SCIENCE
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@megapeiron
1 year ago
Great
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@happyandhealthy888
2 months ago
fluids
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@ScienceStudio-hl6uu
8 months ago
Which country are you from?
Kindly reply me....
1
Reply
@swastibuchude5321
11 months ago
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@jwde6811
1 year ago
Please download an Arabic translation
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@user-up5ty4np6r
4 weeks ago
1
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@gohulgohul6000
9 months ago
Malayalees here click karo
1
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@hosoiarchives4858
1 month ago
.
0:29
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@SharminKhan-fx3qs
8 months ago
Any INDIAN....?
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@miguelgabrielordinal9814
12 days ago
I'm gay
Reply
@EurekaIndila
1 year ago (edited)
American and european people are intelligent hardworking person
8
Reply
5 replies
@drknockboot
1 month ago
Where is translation
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@talhachanna9126
10 months ago
Nice
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