Wednesday, October 09, 2024
Seeing Cell Division Like Never Before
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0:00
Researchers at Harvard Medical School
0:02
have captured extreme closeups of bacterial membranes
0:05
and their cell wall exoskeleton during cell division,
0:08
providing never-before-seen views of the processes involved,
0:12
that may provide new clues for fighting antibiotic resistance.
0:16
The work focused on the double-layered membranes of E. coli.
0:20
Some of the most dangerous bacteria
0:22
that infect humans have this same double membrane structure,
0:25
which makes it hard to get drugs into the bacteria and kill them.
0:30
The researchers used live cell fluorescent imaging
0:32
to get a full view of the bacteria.
0:35
This allowed them to see, in real time,
0:37
how the different cell surface layers changed
0:40
relative to each other during cell division.
0:45
They then used cryo-electron tomography to get
0:48
the first ultra-detailed, three-dimensional views
0:51
of what happens within the double membrane structure
0:53
during division.
0:55
No other tool could reveal such detail inside cells.
1:00
Here, a small opening between the membranes
1:02
of the two daughter cells is captured
1:04
moments before the cells separate.
1:06
The team gained new insights into what
1:09
controls the push and pull between surface creation
1:12
that makes a bacterial cell grow longer and surface creation
1:15
at the division site that allows new cells to form.
1:19
Studying mutants that alter E. coli’s DNA
1:22
revealed that this bacterium contains genetic instructions
1:25
that shape the cell’s division site. Surprisingly,
1:28
the mutants divide in several different ways,
1:31
forming distinct shapes seen throughout the bacterial kingdom.
1:35
By revealing more about how bacteria divide,
1:38
the study promises to drive fundamental research
1:41
and help in combating the
1:43
worldwide antibiotic-resistance health crisis.
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Seeing Cell Division Like Never Before
Harvard Medical School
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From an accredited US medical school
Learn how experts define health sources in a journal of the National Academy of Medicine
2,720,302 views Sep 15, 2022
Using a combination of fluorescent microscopy and cutting-edge cryo-electron tomography, researchers in the labs of Luke Chao and Tom Bernhardt in the Blavatnik Institute at Harvard Medical School have provided never-before-seen views of double-membraned bacteria as they divide.
The work offers new insights into the division process and may aid in the fight against antibiotic resistance, since these drugs typically target bacteria as they divide, when the cell wall and membranes are weakest.
Led by postdoctoral research fellows Paula Navarro and Andrea Vettiger, the two groups made the discoveries possible by combining their expertise in bacterial cell division, bacterial genetics, and cutting-edge imaging.
Results were published Sept. 12 in Nature Microbiology.
Version that includes an audio-description: • Seeing Cell Division Like Never Befor...
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Harvard Medical School
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rongmaw lin
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@Epiousios18
2 years ago
Not gonna lie, kinda happy that Youtube felt the need to recommend this to me so early. Fascinating video.
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79 replies
@francischeefilms
1 year ago
As an ex EM microscopist who did lots of cryo, I know what was involved and this is tricky stuff to get right, with a lot of good spec prep technique required, great work
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3 replies
@thepaintingbanjo8894
2 years ago
The fact technology has gotten so sophisticated enough to render something as miniscule as the inner workings of cell division, in a 3D plane, is blowing my mind.
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56 replies
@KenDBerryMD
1 year ago
Fascinating! Knowledge gleaned from further study of this could be very useful...
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1 reply
@Jenny-tu9fc
2 years ago
I'm in AP Biology right now and found this video in my recommended. My bio teacher is always telling us that the information we're learning now could be completely different in the future, and it's fascinating to watch significant scientific developments happen as a complete biology noob. Awesome video! :D
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35 replies
@micahconnor8954
2 years ago
This is incredible! It's also weird how my brain associates black and white imaging and pixelated stuff with low quality, and yet this is focusing onto more detail than I could imagine! The fact that we can see the individual holes forming on cells is just amazing
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2 replies
@R...T
2 years ago
I can't wait to see this in our textbooks
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22 replies
@laratheplanespotter
2 years ago
Cell membranes are incredible and gets me so excited. I just think all things cell membranes, how ATP supports life and how mitochondria used to be bacteria that our bodies evolved to decide ‘I like you, I like what you could do for me, want to come inside?’ And the protein channels etc. it’s all just so fascinating and exciting.
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8 replies
@Hamzurger
2 years ago
This is really weird but at the same time amazing because of the way it looks so seamless, I hope YouTube sends us more of these vids in our recommended videos. Keep up the good work scientists and thanks for a better future!
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5 replies
@onsokumaru4663
2 years ago (edited)
The amazing thing is how these organism without sight, hearing, taste etc can separate into perfectly equal copies, you don't see a 30-70% split or any uneven split. Always a perfect 50-50 split.
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12 replies
@momentomoriwrath
2 years ago
i never thought about seeing three dimensional cell division, mind blowing
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@justthatnoodle
2 years ago
youtube recommending me random bio videos is always my favorite part of the day
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@crackingneet3556
2 years ago
It's so interesting to see cells under microscope.
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23 replies
@macx_art9372
2 years ago
This one is really impressive, thanks yt for recommending
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@ViceRoze
2 years ago
My problems Multiplying like:
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8 replies
@BookOfMorman
2 years ago
Thank God this was recommended to me! I can now finish my world changing research!
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@gugalaxy7772
2 years ago
This is just awesome, main reason why I want to study microbiology.
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@averyoldYoutubeuser
2 years ago
Studied biology major years ago, now I left but always fascinating to see news and discoveries in this field
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1 reply
@andylau8585
2 years ago
it curious that, after division, the cells produced from the same mother cell are still tight with each other when sliding on each other.
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@Roger-go6jc
1 year ago
Did Microbiology at Commonwealth Pathology Labs back starting in the 1970s. Not in it now, but this is so cool. Like visiting old friends.
The exponential growth in knowledge and potential benefits is exciting, and needed, with the multi resistant horrors looming.
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@RythmGkwd
2 years ago
This is amazing beyond words !
I had always seen cells in books but seeing them like this is astonishing
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@DrDunsparce
2 years ago
Hell yeah my man popping off with that division
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@peterparkee
2 years ago
This is gonna be in our textbooks
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6 replies
@madanomaly8185
2 years ago
Awesome research! Glad that world have people interested in moving further the progress and allow all humanity have access to it.
Thanks for sharing!
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@AriaHarmony
2 years ago
Wow this is amazing! Is this the actual speed of the division? I know microscopic life is usually the example of multiplying really fast, but this looks insane, the way it's so smooth is both beautiful and terrifying.
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6 replies
@Ruth_m0
2 years ago
Iam in 11th grade and this was so fun to learn
Iam glad our generation has a lot of resources
It makes learning so enjoyablee
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@truhhhhhhhokIII3
1 year ago (edited)
Guys hear me out, might have tried some really strong salvia…in which sound and vision multipled, then all time stopped, and was in (what i thought at the time was maybe my dna or brain, or just a single cell) just a big pink room with the wildest pattern on it…in which i gained the appreciation for my existence and from that point looked onward; to not only better myself, but to try and help be as much of a positive influence onto the world around me at the same time…but I realized now i was just at the outer membrane level and basically in a translucent fleshy colored 0:48 encompassed within it, or at least a strange 3d(4d?)mosaic of this(or to my eye looks similar), thanks guys!
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2 replies
@GUSTAVO_06
2 years ago
Mitosis’s is AMAZING, this looks so cool
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@T-heon
2 years ago
This is simply amazing. Not just the dividing of the cells, but the fact that technology has advanced so far since the 20th century that we can now see cellular level things in clear and good detail.
September 23rd, 2022
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3 replies
@dandiaz19934
2 years ago
An actual good youtube recommendation. An extremely important, fascinating, informational and succinct youtube video that's not a short.
Reply
@djk1288
2 years ago
This feels like incredible news. For so long I hated the fact that we were essentially stuck playing catch-up with microscopic organisms. After all the hard work and effort we put in to prevent people from suffering and dying to diseases, bacteria just... go around that? Hell nah. About time we take the fight to them.
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3 replies
@beekneed
7 months ago
Life is so astonishingly complex, beautiful, and fascinating. Hats off to those whose work brings us these jaw dropping insights 🙏
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@celestialamber174
2 years ago
It really is fascinating learning about how life at the most basic level works.
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@FrameCounting
1 year ago
The fact that this is possible to see is just mind blowing!!!
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@based_gigachad6094
2 years ago
I never really considered the “pull / push” microstructures that are part of cell division. I guess I always thought it just kind of, fell in half. Amazing!
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2 replies
@NathanHarrison7
7 months ago
Technological advancements are opening up a whole new world of exploration and knowledge. What an exciting time to be alive.
1
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@flamevell3258
2 years ago
Amazing. Maybe hopefully we can utilize this to help understand cancer cells, utilizing crispr and maybe fighting back at it
5
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@jonb4020
3 weeks ago
Wel done those scientists working on things that truly help humanity! May God bless your work and give you insights and integrity.
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@ramblin_man23
1 year ago
Would I ever search for this? No
Am I glad YouTube it showed me? Yes
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@hilmiarkan
2 years ago
thank you for making this kind of information free for all
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@yashjhaveri6186
2 years ago
This is a certified class 11th chapter 8 cell cycle and cell division bussin' practical moment. Truly a ncert moment
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1 reply
@acer8123
1 year ago
That detailed cell wall image through the tomography blew my mind
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@siyamzz33
2 years ago
Textbook production companies be like : yes...it's time for action
8
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@elberethreviewer5558
11 days ago
This is one of the coolest things I've seen in a long time.
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@cleberva
2 years ago
It's so cool to see the whole process, I grew up thinking I would never get to see this.
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@inderdhami5720
1 year ago
It is crucial to identify such phases via these sort of model organisms, because the diversity starts at very molecular level and how each molecule contributes to those post translational changes are significant in drug development...this is fascinating work to know that how actually things are happening at that minute scale just now! Amazing work. This paper is going to be a huge success
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@DrCottes
1 year ago
YOUTUBE, these kinds of informational vids are what I want my algorithm to focus on 🎉 INCREDIBLE!!!
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@xXmlgamingXx355
2 years ago
It’s incredible just how much we’ve advanced, I can’t wait to see what the future holds!
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3 replies
@SpartanAegis
1 year ago
I'm in the 1st year of my Biology PhD program and it's nice to get video recommendations like these.
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@ICNHH
2 years ago
this is the type of video thats gonna be recommended to everyone after 5 years
4
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@dayramagdaleno9646
7 months ago
What a time to be alive! :) Incredible work!!
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@aaron4863
2 years ago
i absolutely LOVE biology and studying cells under a microscope is one of my favorite things to do
and this video was just so damn interesting, I can't wait to be one of these people who make such unexpected things happen.
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@barsgunduz1689
2 years ago
This is just a high resolution imaging of what´s happening while division occur. The protein content and sequential events already kind of "known". This is a great research by the way but the reason why this is not in the children textbook is that it is really complicated to understand how this is happening without have an idea about genetics and biochemistry :)
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1 reply
@ireallywantabeard6192
1 year ago
It feels like this should be recommended in like 7 years
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@avisionofthefuture3690
2 years ago
This is so fascinating!
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@anomittity
8 months ago
WOW! Bravo on that discovery! Quite significant! Keep them tools coming for all them scientists!!
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@CabbageSandwich
2 years ago
A most impressive video.
I'd love to know more about how they did this.
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1 reply
@PsyllyCymon
7 months ago
The Microverse is one insane space! Fascinating learning and fun facts.
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@cloudreaver
2 years ago
Funny to think that a billion of these are dividing inside me at this moment 😁👍
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@Diamond.-.
2 years ago
I loved watching all 3 pixels of cell division
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@ElectronicMusicDaemon
2 years ago
Awesome
*puts chlorine in it
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@justblue7121
2 years ago
Can't wait for this to get recommended to me again in 7 years
1
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@lewdleaf4975
2 years ago
As a biotech major this is sick as fuck
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@AshtonMacolm
7 months ago
I am just thankful that such information is still free and available. I am not in a medical field, though I wish I had at least considered it more when in my previous years. But I develop digital solutions. And I know I will find a ise for it in the future. Take the logic of it and not the process, and it can be applied anywhere. Great bit of research and a great video 👏
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@ajmalabidinnur2173
2 years ago
Why does this feel like a murder case being briefed? 😂❤️
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@marcochimio
8 months ago
Great images, but I really would have loved to hear more about these "push" and "pull" mutants.
1
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@sanderschat
2 years ago
dont know what is more impressive:
the way it all just works in Nature,
or the fact they discovered this with their telescopes and other fancy pancy stuff
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@joeddiejoe77
1 year ago
Always kuddos to these smart people who continue to study for the sake of humanity's survival.
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@weakw1ll
2 years ago
Why is this music so intense 🤣
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@CoriSparx
7 months ago
People really take for granted what a huge deal it is that we humans are capable of understanding the way nature functions on such a detailed and complex level. NO OTHER animal could even begin to even comprehend the idea of bacteria, let alone the idea that they have cell membranes and that by studying those membranes you can find weaknesses in them to exploit, and then use that knowledge to fight against disease.
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@yojetsharma7549
2 years ago
As a PhD candidate, i did not expect this to filled with comments 😂
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2 replies
@wordreet
2 years ago
Incredible that this is happening thousands of times per minute in our bodies all day every day!
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@thejesuschrist
2 years ago
awesome
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3 replies
@tomorrowbytogether6594
11 days ago
That’s insanely impressive detail!
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@hpr1327
2 years ago
its so amazing to see cells duplicating so fast in just seconds.
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5 replies
@glenncordova4027
1 year ago (edited)
Amazing views I never imagined I would live to see. Incredible detail!
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@G59forlife.
2 years ago
Ok that's probably maybe pretty cool I guess possibly perhaps yeah I suppose 🤯
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1 reply
@studiomg3212
2 years ago
I was just thinking about how cool it would be to visualize dividing cells in real time, then I get recommended this video!
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@annguy5563
2 years ago
Would it hurt cells made up our body as well, since all cells plasma membrane have this phospholipid bilayer?
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5 replies
@yourcommander3412
2 years ago
almost like magnetism transposing them -beautiful.
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@luk4aaaa
1 year ago
I’m no med student, but this was just really cool to see. Thank you
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@OmiReal
2 years ago
We can all say this video will become popular in the future
1
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@beepbobeep4594
2 years ago
I feel so special watching something that will be in biology textbooks in a few years haha
4
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@madansharma2700
1 year ago
Better than most other videos I have ever watched.
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@terrabelle9937
2 years ago
We have a pretty cool rock, huh? Lots of cool things on this rock. But lots of not cool things. Let's get a new rock.
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4 replies
@retchie7355
6 months ago
One thing we must absolutely NEVER cut funding for is research.
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@nohackjustlag4241
2 years ago
Damn , God buff the bacteria
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@linfcitxnk
1 year ago
Finally we can see something that actually looks as clean as book's pictures
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@vulcher7927
2 years ago
when you rub your eyes to hard
3
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@joji_okami
1 year ago
More like this YouTube. Yes, please.
1
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@coar
2 years ago
Nice! But have you tried paying your Postdocs a living wage for Boston?
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@ma.cecillacerna5506
1 year ago
This is amazing. Technology has never been so advanced as it is these days. This is very informative. Thank you for recommending it.
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@ChemEDan
2 years ago
Bacteria are one thing. But how do banana splits?
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3 replies
@safrafath
2 years ago (edited)
Fascinating and informative video. I'm so glad that YouTube recommended this video to me.
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@davethebrave.
1 year ago
this is a really bad idea. i wish i could see a group of cells
4
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@mrxxbrian
1 year ago
This is overwhelmingly amazing in so many aspects. Science is so damn crazy
1
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@bradcallahan3546
7 months ago
lol. Harvard is full of clowns
3
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1 reply
@simbathecat1148
2 years ago
Great recommendation, see you all again after few years
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@カピバラ-z1e
1 year ago (edited)
I like how this video just go straight to what they've discovered.
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@Ardeact
1 year ago
damn, an expensive light microscope at 100x oil objectives can see bacteria but it's very small like a speck, the amount of detail that this type of microscopy can resolve (with living bacteria) is amazing.
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@NizarZgheib
1 year ago
Whenever I see great engineering, I praise the Engineer. SDL
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@kaliboy-zk5pm
3 months ago
This video is a gem.
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@shegsdev
1 year ago
This is really insightful. Keep up the great work!
1
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@pewguin6300
2 years ago
that was some EPIC music
1
Reply
@CholeraRave
1 year ago
Honestly, i kinda want more videos like this popular here
Reply
@MaiPoirot
5 months ago
How amazing being able to see this!
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@darz_k.
1 year ago
Wow! It's amazing what computerz can do nowadays with graphics!
Cant wait to see the actual footage!
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@sumitonyt
2 years ago
I'm Amazed that how technology that we made is capable of doing so complex work which is way ahead from our imagination, if someone noticed it also showed a hole b/w dividing cell wall which is commendable.
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@karlostj4683
1 year ago
Most impressive. Awesome information. Let's hope researchers can take advantage of the new insights to create ever better cures.
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@thesemidailydingus7530
2 years ago
thats insane!
insane in the membrain
1
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@Diamondsigmaspaceb
2 years ago
Thank you YouTube for the recommendation
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@smilingnature9941
1 year ago (edited)
Micro universe is very interesting and full of mystery and fascinating things.
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@leonardgibney2997
1 year ago
Wonders never cease.
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@ghostban3743
2 years ago
Sehr schöne Aufnahmen.
1
Reply
@agestatsega
2 years ago
This Is Fascinating! I'm Glad That YouTube Recommended This To Me :0
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@gtabro1337
2 years ago
Fantastic work
2
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@unixinteractive6605
2 years ago
This is magnificent! Imagine how we can easily to help the Viruses and bacteria
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@marsowtudzki7474
1 year ago
the people behind these are the real heroes of our time. so fascinating.
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@Nitin-k-singh
1 year ago
Thanks Youtube for recommending which i wanted for the first time...
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@A.--.
8 months ago
Good jop to all researchers and support staff involved.
Reply
@LucynthiaRitonia
1 year ago
Amazing how we can see what controls the push and pull of cell division! I never would have thought to research that but here we are! :D
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@zxvn8858
8 months ago
I was literally learning about this yesterday in biology
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1 year ago
Thank you Harvard Medical School
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@PeterLGଈ
3 weeks ago
Amazing, and fascinating, work.
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@rickypaynetube
6 months ago
Its crazy how we can peer into our own body essentially and find a world way more complicated than anything seen out in the universe.
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@Seichensi
8 months ago
Nice. Also crazy how quickly they divide; if that's in real time.
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@merion297
8 months ago
Wow, that 3D imagery is cool!
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@dr.diegomaier
10 months ago
Eu realmente curti seu material. Agradeço pelo esforço que você dedica em seu canal!
Eu também sou apaixonado por temas relacionados à saúde. De fato, eu sou especialista em telemedicina, realizando consultas em todo o Brasil!
Continue com o excelente trabalho!!
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@maxmori8616
2 years ago
Hey! I'm watching this now instead of having it recommended to me 9 years later!
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@vanta6lack
8 months ago
Absolutely mindblowing!
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@GMPranav
2 years ago
That small opening during division feels like the death star weakness from star wars lol
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@caleabmcvicker6250
7 months ago
this is INSANELY cool
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@govindagovindaji4662
7 months ago
Fantastic~!! Incredible~!!! Useful~!!!! Thank goodness they are working on this antibiotic resistance phenomenon we have allowed among our stupid midst. There is absolutely no excuse for the medical field to have ignored the warnings that scientists have given us all for decades now ~ no excuse for the patients and the public, either. We deserve out lot, unfortunately. We take everything for granted.
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@nsbd90now
2 years ago
Cell membranes are amazing. This was very cool. Thanks!
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@ianferryboat
1 year ago
I don't know if this is English Language but i love this.
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@Echo81Rumple83
1 year ago
Leaving a comment in hopes that the algorithm will bless me with more breakthrough stories in scientific endeavors.
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@d0p3w1z
7 months ago
When that went 3D from what seemingly looks 2D to us blew my mind
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@colinwilliams3459
1 year ago
I like this video I’m glad YouTube recommended me this
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@bookwormd8627
1 year ago
I just started learning about this in my bio class!!! We were looking at the phases of mitosis and I was wondering, “can we use a microscope to actively watch cell division happen?” And this video popped up in my recommend!
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@PianoScenesMoviesandSeries
1 year ago
This is extremely fascinating.
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@vedransego2110
2 years ago
No idea why this was recommended but 🔥 knowledge
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@ross-carlson
7 months ago
We are so lucky that there are so many men and women of science that didn't accept "god did it" and wanted to understand how things actually work. Incredible.
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2 replies
@aktchungrabanio6467
2 years ago
Absolutely sensual. YES.
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@nocturno7660
2 years ago
God, this is outstanding to look at, mind blowing
1
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@KirolosMakhlouf
1 year ago
This was so fascinating to watch!
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@TheLuismaBeaTle
1 year ago
Damn that 3d scan made me proud at how intelligence lets humanity fight anything that perils its survival. Chest all puffy and shii, we’re so cunning
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@RukarioEnterprisesLLC
1 year ago
Shout out to the camera man for being able to shrink himself down into cellular size to record this!
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@e.s.r5809
1 year ago
This is amazing! Super interesting for biophotovoltaics too, since optimising electron transport across cyanobacteria's membranes is so key to making them viable.
(Though if the farming industry would stop dosing animals with routine antibiotics, simply so they don't die from the filthy and horrific conditions they're kept in... that would really help the antibiotics crisis too. Just saying. Reducing animal farming and improving welfare would be so many birds with one stone.)
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@kylebroussard5952
7 months ago (edited)
For some reason, this made me think of the Universe and the Mandelbrot Set. Like what if the Big Bang was really just our cell separating from its parent and we live inside that cell, in another thing, with infinite complexity and dimensions, to infinitum. Each time scale gets too big, things just jump up a dimension.
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@mgntstr
7 months ago
... the "double layer cell membrane wall" is the default cell wall in nature. Bacteria, Animals and plants all have this feature "Unique and fascinating structure".
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@alt3741
2 years ago
Thank you YouTube
1
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@CoreyChambersLA
1 year ago (edited)
Harvard should report on how the medical establishment makes antibiotic resistance worse by over-prescribing.
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1 reply
@MMW1531
1 year ago
The state of living is so natural and wonderful.🙏
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@CalvinHikes
1 year ago
Very cool.
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@Maximilian-Willert
2 years ago
Thanks for the awesome video! Would you be able to share what kind of hardware and software was used to create these kind of recordings?
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1 reply
@andyabajo
2 years ago
My highly, nerdly side of Youtube algorithm recommend this to me and I couldn't be more happy.
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@WhateverOwO
2 years ago
it's always great to see advancement in any field, I study physics but this is also awesome, science will never see to surprise me cease to surprise me, no matter what field it is :DDDD
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@Noise991
6 months ago
The moment it went to 3D i just stood there fucking mouth wide open at the absolute genius behind this tech. Amazing.
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@ZubairKhan-vs8fe
3 months ago
Nature is amazing
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@andie_pants
2 years ago
I'm so very glad that smart people are out there doing this kind of work. You keep saving the world, I'll make sure your networks stay up and running. 🙂
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@xxthxforkillxx
2 years ago
I'm currently on LSD(nocap)
I clicked this because the thumbail loocked really trippy to me, 2 minutes later I'm filled with questions I've never ever thought before
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@ItalyTordy
2 years ago
This is fascinating!
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@nieuwegeljo5645
1 month ago
Very impressive and fascinating.
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@baphnie
3 weeks ago
This is the sort of thing the algo needs to push
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@Mr.SharkTooth-zc8rm
3 weeks ago
(In Spock's voice) Fascinating.
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@dustynyoom
2 years ago
props to the cameraman who shrunk for this footage
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@desertwhaler
1 year ago (edited)
I've always been worried about antibiotic resistance ever since I first heard of it. It sounded like a death sentence in the distant future. Good to know we're learning enough to combat that!
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@gilleslejeune6823
1 year ago
Thanks but the title is misleading,
it's not cell division, you cannot assimilate specific bacterium with a simple animal cell. Bacterium is a whole living oganism, way more complex (even if in the human bold classification, bacterium is an unicellular organism).
In the second part, by using Electron cryotomography, you have to work with sliced DEAD tissu, producing only 2D black and white pictures. So, what you see in this second part, is not "in vivo" not "in vitro" but in "silico" (computer theorical reconstruction). How do you know that the intrusive process of cryotomography is not modifiying the shape of what you see ?
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@rachel-xn7vq
1 year ago
cant wait to see this be viral in the next 10 years
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@drewdj45
1 year ago
This might be a dumb question, but if energy cannot be created nor destroyed, how and where do cells get the energy to multiply?
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@duckyoutube6318
8 months ago
I have a few questions.
What is the speed of division? Is it universal or dependent on a number of factors like size or complexity?
Is there a cause?
Is there a limit to how many times a cell can divide?
What is the energy state berfore during and after? Do the cells weigh the same? Are they the same on all dimensions?
Are there differences between the first division and last?
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@emanuelbabayagaortiz7333
1 year ago
Virology is a very interesting subject
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@kentheengineer592
2 years ago (edited)
Cell Division Is Like Portals but Energy Comes From Demensions
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@tevinfw
2 years ago
I hate microorganisms. They're our greatest, most capable enemies. But never doubt mankind, the true underdog here.
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@startuphub4097
1 year ago (edited)
How fascinating that even the simplest single cell organisms are incredibly complex with mechanisms we can't figure out too easily. There is such jawdropping wonder everywhere we look and like art, this technology has given us a chance to linger and appreciate something most of us would have just glossed over. PPP
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2 replies
@TheJerbol
7 months ago
Interesting if rudimentary results. This didn't break any barriers
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@ciurdypsyco
2 years ago
it's amazing how energy is dissipated.
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@clairenime
2 years ago
Doing Biology again this year, and though its not really my favorite, this was pretty neat to see.
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@infinite-content5969
1 year ago
Here before it blows up 11 years later
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@status_king_7.
1 year ago
Hi guys,I am watching this from India 🇮🇳
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@richardlong3745
1 year ago
Gotta say, this is some really good news coming at a time when there's a real need for some positive news during a period of so many bad things happening on a global scale.
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@DarkStargg
3 months ago
The presentation is very fine
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@cunorertv1283
1 year ago
OMG AWESSOMEEEE you can work so good on that
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@n-i-n-o
2 years ago
Nett hier. Aber waren Sie schon mal in Baden-Württemberg?
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@WideCuriosity
8 months ago
Interesting recommendation from YT. I'm not specifically into "medical" matters (unless feeling unwell 😉) but I'm definitely into science in general. Impressive data. I must try to look at some of your other videos.
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@RootedHat
2 years ago
amazing, to see inside as it happens.
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@cesaru3619
7 months ago (edited)
You should thank me for driving the microprocessor and technology industry so it can be used not only for entertainment but for something better, you welcome.
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@sawboneiomc8809
2 years ago
Yep....just happened by chance in some puddle of ooze 4 billion years ago and now everything on earth came from it. Good job guys!
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@Dirty_Squirrell
2 years ago
Very interesting. Thanks for the video.
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@frenzscivola3099
2 years ago
awesome!
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@tahachraiet
1 year ago
this type of videos you'll get suggested in 2033 for no reason
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@onewaytochrist
2 years ago
The one time YouTube recommendations actually are good. See you guys in 10 years 😉
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@jomamacallinyou
8 months ago
It's incredible. If this is applied in some way carelessly, the consequences may be disastrous. Let's hope funding the research doesn't make this a for-profit venture. We're not making better tasting fruit or weather hearty plants. Please keep a level head if possible.
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@camiifu
2 years ago
the fact we’re seeing this rn is nuts
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@nitishroy153
2 years ago
This gonna blow up soon
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@cajunking5987
7 months ago
I’m surprised the images are so much better
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@hesohit
1 year ago
How do you slow the division of cell? Such as limiting nutrients, etc other factors like that?
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@Mark1Mach2
1 year ago
Great recommendation by YouTube
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@rayrocher6887
7 months ago
Thanks for trying to save the world, save future kids, mother earth, thanks hero doctors
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@ptaweston
1 year ago
Please get rid of the dramatic background music. It is very distracting. Other than that, fantastic video!
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@zahidkhan5532
2 years ago
outstanding work
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@husseinakarr
2 years ago
this will blow up, it already has 500k views
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@mra4167
3 months ago
Out of curiosity (please correct me if I am wrong) the generation time (time taken by a cell to divide) of an Escherichia coli is 20 minutes, they say it is a real time rendering of the event, but the 2nd and 3 rd divisions were instantaneous, why?
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@pandaraph
2 years ago
"But now, im splitting us up"
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@commoncitizen03
1 year ago
Great. Thanks for sharing
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@edwinpadilla856
1 year ago
Than you for sharing.
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@Leaveyt505
1 year ago
Everything is expanding, even the smallest cell. And our universe.
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@CppExpedition
6 months ago
as a programmer i can tell that the hardest language code i ever found in my life is not Malbolge, by far it is DNA.
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@naturedude222
8 months ago
Thanks for the contributions to science you provided for us to learn. Wish I had this information when teaching Biology. MSU "74".
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@RealJonSarge
2 years ago
Interesting, so if we could develop something that negates, or diminishes the effectiveness of the push/pull mechanism; we could stop Echoli from reproducing at its current rate of division. GL to all the BIO majors who will work with this new information.
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@_N0_0ne
1 year ago
Thank you
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@hansa5867
1 year ago
Oh nice, that was quite valuable
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@ElTurbinado
1 year ago
Wow, great work!
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@metroidragon
7 months ago
Glad to see the importance of this crisis being highlighted. Factory farms in particular must be stopped from abusing our antibiotics. Crimes against humanity.
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@adamamirwassim2956
7 months ago
How great the creater is subhanAllah
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@appidydafoo
1 year ago
Amazing, thank you
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@martinaps
1 year ago
this goes hard
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@dankonesovic8437
1 year ago (edited)
Thanks for the insight.
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@freddyplunkett6281
2 years ago
this is so interesting
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@JammyDodger337
2 years ago
Not a science buff at all, not quite sure how I even got here but that is just amazing! How far from imperfection is the Creator of all that exists!
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@Astronomynatureandmusic
2 years ago
The video speaks about two forms of division? Could you elaborate on that?
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@jordannemclean6467
4 months ago
Thanks
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@lydiahanke
1 year ago
Now that's really cool!
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@421sap
2 years ago
Thank you!!
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@venkatesanmj61
5 months ago
THANK YOU
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@uniquebg4237
1 year ago
Parallel binary fussion or through hypotonic solution
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@seemslegit8615
1 year ago
It's almost like the corners of the membrane are in sections of four and are sliding off at 90 degrees from each other. you can see it transitioning. its sliding off of the side rather than a spontaneous break at the "top"
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1 reply
@alexdelara9858
2 years ago
Remarkable ! But that's progress.
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@kentlofgren
1 year ago
Science. Keep it up.
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@ytrebiLeurT
5 months ago (edited)
Where does the food come from so that they have the strength to divide themselves? What feeds the "surface creation" that forms new cells?
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@1.4142
2 years ago
Cutting edge
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@natsudragneelthefiredragon
1 year ago
Fascinating
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@ChrisHillASMR
1 year ago
needs higher resolution for molecular bond simulation. neat 1960s level diarama turned 2022. real cute.
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@yaksak2706
7 months ago
Great. But where do the cell division instructions come from?
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@KitsuneMasku
2 years ago
Not a student or working in science but still amzaing
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@samuel_akn
1 year ago
0:32 Oh damn! So this is the horizontal transfers that are exchanged of the desoxyribonucleic molecule between bacteria?
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@polarberri
2 years ago
Incredible!
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@NEWDAWNrealizingself
4 months ago
THANKS!
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@عبدالوهابالطلى
3 months ago
And some deny the intelligence and power behind all this truly admirable demonstration of power and art exhibition from nanoscales to gigascales can't be without creator
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@garymucher4082
1 year ago
If that were truly real time, it is easy to see just how dangerous such cells can over whelm an infected person so quickly. It takes no time for the cells to over take anyone exposed to such cells. A mere two cell infection turns into millions of cells in virtually no time...
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@ddb5354
2 years ago
how about combating the widespred use of preventative antibiotics in farm animals instead ?
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@sigra4867
1 month ago
Amazing tech cells have, looks pretty hard to understand so we can repeat it via our invention but we gonna get there as we smart too.
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@DominicSantini
2 years ago
Yooo we’re doing antibiotic resistance in our Medical Intervention class rn. And we’re culturing E.Coli for an experiment
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@totoys1573
1 year ago
When I was in biology class, I was able to see a foraging amoeba through a light microscope…it was a fascinating phenomenon
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@Smoove_J
1 year ago (edited)
The solution was so simple. Just use live cell florescent imaging with cryo electron tomography. What took them so long to figure this out?
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@WitchMedusa
1 year ago
This was pretty cool
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@henrym.5884
8 months ago
Thanks.
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@juanmanuelmartínezchávez431
3 months ago
Es posible monitorizar la actividad cerebral identificando la función cerebral así como las velocidades de cada área?
Gracias!
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@Haze1434
1 year ago
Medical Media: "[There's a] worldwide, antibiotic resistance health crisis"
My local GP: "You have just a teenie, tiny sniffle? Here, have some antibiotics."
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@مرادمحمدصبري
10 months ago
Thanks a lot
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@princequestly2218
7 months ago
Wow this is amazing. Go science! 🤓
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@yahoog555yahoog4
7 months ago
combating the antibiotic resistant strains to make it resistant to d technology not found anywhere BRILLANT
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@danielyoffe7562
2 years ago
00:33 Introducing: Dynamic Islands
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@Cujo5
2 years ago
Fascinating af.
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@gamb
8 months ago
extremely impressive. the resourcefulness of upper level biologists is inhuman, imagine what they’ll discover as technology advances further.
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1 reply
@usernamewatcher
1 year ago
this is so amazing!
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@pythonboi5816
1 month ago
How is the study going? updates?
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@ysoserious301
2 years ago
Wow 😯 that’s my some random cool science recommendations in a while I get 😮
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@gunfoogunfoo2287
1 year ago
That’s amazing! Didn’t understand anything!
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@poisoncurls882
4 months ago
thats crazy as hell
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@Samrat-GC
5 months ago
Biology is the only subject where division means Multiplication
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1 reply
@poormasterZ
3 months ago
Yes, our universe is there...
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@songthanh896
1 year ago
Wonderful
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@austinlee9974
1 year ago
I am currently a Biology undergraduate student. The curriculum actually teaches the cleavage proteins and the conditions that allows them to work, so I don't really know why the video makes it seem like we don't already know this.
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@charlieakin8074
1 year ago
WOW.way to go .
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@NoopyP
1 year ago
That's really cool!!!
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@mperalta42
7 months ago
See you guys in 11 years
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@richardr777
1 year ago
How amazing!
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@thebrokegirl
1 year ago
mindblowing
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@Bo9a9
1 year ago
What are the chances of me currently studying cell division and getting this recommended to me without even searching anything related to the topic
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@zanelittlegray
7 months ago (edited)
Very interesting!
They've done this w/bacteria; have they done this with any virus yet?
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@bombadeer8231
1 year ago
God that was beautiful! Keep them coming 🙏
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@jacobreuter
2 years ago
This is amazing
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@d.kryptic.j_9962
7 months ago
Double membrane? Hard to get too?
Doubles the pill description
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@maxsager139
8 months ago
I envision a world where cars, plane, ships and other machines can replicates themselves in the same way a cell does when it divides.
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@Roxas99Yami
2 years ago
Very nice video
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@osheridan
2 years ago
They're just so... Small ❤️
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@rubbish9231
1 year ago
I m Software Engineer this things are fascinating enough
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@Guenter34
2 years ago
That's actually insane
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@Kennybooy9
1 month ago
Have you researched cellular mygopiarter succaridde yet. Let’s have info on this.
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@Fawaffles
2 years ago
Leaving my mark here for when this will resurface again in 10 years
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@richdespiseus6243
1 year ago
Have a care - remember 'measurement disturbs'.
How cells react to the chemicals and conditions of observation may not be their 'normal' pattern.
I mean, after finding out how 'viruses' are imaged, we've all seen that the processing of a sample produces the same result whether an 'infectious agent' is present, or not.
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@dadinggo
2 years ago
Incredible
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@rykkor
1 year ago
So Cool.
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@TheBastardCommie
2 years ago
Mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell
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@zenthegeneral
2 years ago
There is a split moment when bacteria divides, it is susceptible due to that small membrane hole
And finding the proper timing to administering certain drugs will be paramount to taking advantage of this opening. It's not about the brute force biological mechanisms of the drug, at least not only that. It's also the timing as well. Timing is everything. In medicine, and in life.
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@IntercontinentalArmy
1 year ago
From a Harvard Grad that has since graduation moved on from Student to now former Dean Of MIT. I want to ask what the pupose of looking at e-coli was? Are you trying to research such for purposes of making a weapon or for purposes of creating a medicine that myself as well as other cancer survivors and patients could take to combat our dirty port caused heart infection? E-coli is the only virus or bacteria that causes the activation of my heart infection! Bleed to death or not shower? That was The Question!
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@vidhoard
1 year ago
So cool!
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@hishouha
1 year ago
That's amazing !!!
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@SailorGreenTea
2 years ago
Interesting
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@ChillGuyYoutube
2 years ago
i didnt understand a single thing but this is crazy
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@megaxenu753
2 years ago
i really wish they wouldn't do genetic experiments on bacteria and viruses like this.
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@TheLordstrider
1 year ago
after seeing this video i know two things now.
1. we are decades away from curing cancer.
2. the technology is not as advanced as we want to be live it is.
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@Akshithaa974
1 year ago
Nice video
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@alf3071
7 months ago
amazing technology to see it in 3d
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@SnoopyDoofie
1 year ago
Cells are good at math. They know how to divide and multiply.
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@skiney
2 years ago
Wowzers
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@cameronstokes4059
1 year ago
Interesting!
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@NandkumarKamatGoa
4 months ago (edited)
Cell walls and membranes hold the key to the living state of matter , we know nothing about their evolution in cyanobacteria, archea, eubacteria, actinobacteria, unicellular yeasts and mycelial fungi and therefore such knowledge will help to get us there and produce synthetic living state of matter soon working as per our program😊
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@sashimifeast
1 year ago
fascinating!!!
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@wbrito8617
1 year ago
amazing!
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@edcoad4930
1 year ago
amazing!
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@Guillermoq5
8 months ago
Awesome!
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@mho...
1 year ago (edited)
Cells, the OG's of "Divide & Conquer" elbowcough
but jokes aside, this is breathtaking science!, seeing the boundry layers & a hole between 2 cells divinding?!, never thought that would be possible in my lifetime!
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@yuuthehobo
1 year ago
Man, imagine how scary it must be if the bacteria become aware of what we're doing: incomprehensibly larger beings collaborating in the millions, using their untold generations of gathered resources and knowledge to perform acts that the bacteria never could dream of understanding, all with the hope of shining a light on their physiological make-up and eventually manufacturing their destruction.
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@kozcs2
2 years ago
Very interesting
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@bonifaciodachuva
2 years ago
wow they do this much faster than i ever imagined.
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@caroline6218
1 year ago
This is so cool
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@johnboyajian1689
6 months ago (edited)
My mom went to Harvard. And my Grandma would walk in Harvard school and got her Doctorate and PhD and my Grandma went would walk in Harvard square and my Granpa became an electrician at Boston IT.
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@TheOphiuchus666
1 month ago
Check Stonehenge for cell division.
The stones were used in a sex magic ritual that split the sun itself. Split the Aten, Aten is sun in Egyptian.
It's based on Pi. A circle divided by it's diameter is cell division. 3.14
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@vitovitovito3693
1 year ago
Science is fantastic!
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@tvviewer4500
2 years ago
Just remember you are a human being and if you haven't eaten dirt or rolled around on the ground in a while - don't be scared of things that aren't scary.
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@nacer_rpg
2 years ago
Great.
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@Haabsa22024
8 months ago
So cool!
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@tach1484
3 weeks ago
Youtube recomended a good video ngl
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@AsteroidSoda
1 year ago
“This video makes me wanna multiply.. with you ;)”
“I’m a clone of you mum..”
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@denkena8371
1 year ago
incredible
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@4m0d
2 years ago
beautiful
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@rodrigomanuelv3264
8 months ago
La complejidad de la vida es abrumadora
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@blazingblizzard2014
2 years ago
I wish my last 2 brain cells can do something like this
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@balboo1018
4 months ago
Yes
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@abinashpegu8663
4 months ago
This is Crazy !!!
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@jossylopes
2 years ago
Awesome
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@bobann3566
7 months ago
How very Dielectric as explained by Charles Proteus Steinmetz in his book Electric Discharges, Waves and Impulses.
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@invisiblevfx
2 years ago
Simple, Just use locktite to harden the outer membrane
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@chinesewithjenjenlee
1 year ago
This is amazing ❤真的是神奇
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@logan1219
1 year ago
Did you know that there were 100 trillion atoms within that one cell? Did you know that scientists are not only looking at those 100 trillion atoms, but they're also looking at the electrons, neutrons and protons and the nucleus of each atom and manipulating them? There is an entire universe to be explored within each one of these cells. And there's about 37 trillion cells in a human body.
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@patricalexisnollora7372
12 days ago
this is like one of the videos you see before the beginning of an apocalypse
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@MrOdaniels
10 months ago
Hive populations and populations in general split and expand to new territory when they reach critical mass. Interesting this happens on the cellular level also.
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@dissaid
1 year ago
Interesting video...😎
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@raym984
2 years ago
Imagine if someday in the future we created nano cameras that can penetrate bacterial walls and capture footage from the inside the cell. That would be so freaking cool!
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@IIISentorIII
7 months ago
This is exactly what hapend to me!
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@christophercraft957
1 year ago
Ah-mazing!
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@melissarainchild
3 months ago
To see the grand picture, sometimes one has to see the small picture first...
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@DarkGT
2 years ago
So how you gonna attack the double membrane?
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@Mindsi
1 year ago
The motor proteins, dynen and kinsen
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@steveschunk5702
8 months ago
Is the cytokinesis shown here also performed by microtubules?
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@AdityaPandey-vf2hh
6 months ago
Can anybody explain me what is meant by push and pull in surface creation ?
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@biospheres3404
2 years ago
Cool!
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@advocatusdiaboli1588
1 year ago
The times we live in.
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@fraanzfan8158
2 years ago
seeing beyond
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@001vgupta
1 year ago
More detailed info and experiments are required.
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@foundingtitan7
2 years ago
amazing
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@patrickoconnell8197
1 year ago
I just watched a video on how to do this in after effects
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@markmuller7962
8 months ago
Amazing
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@Mcthindi
1 year ago
This is good 👍
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@Dream.big.dreams
8 months ago
Seems to me that the weakest link is the area where the division is occurring or at the very ends where the layers are closest together.
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@emirdkl
2 years ago
i don't know why i watched this, but i'm not regretting what i learned
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@julietaherrera6639
6 months ago
hi! can I use a small part for a non profit video?
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@kanekaiiishoyo3378
2 years ago
Nice
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@killuafurude
1 year ago
Am I imagining or was it helping itself divide further
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@nelisv7218
8 months ago
Life is just amazing…..
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@kingsmen1009
2 years ago
What do you mean when you say “instructions” ? If it what I think it is, then who wrote them?
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@andremantovani
1 year ago
awesome
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@roseross1312
1 year ago
isn’t it crazy that maybe someday in the future someone will look back at the this very moment and say wow thats crap quality (inferring that’s research advances)
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@ddpppbd
2 years ago
Wow, and funny I made an animated video not long ago it makes me think a bit of this video, thank you Havard ;]
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@Just-a-Fish.Moonlighter
2 years ago
Here before youtube recommends this to me in 7 years
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@TheWorldsStage
7 months ago
stupid poison flavored tic tacs that stop me from enjoying my sushi chicken
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@iAmit_Kumar
2 months ago
Awesome😍
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@sidc.3817
7 months ago (edited)
Wow....how about cell regeneration around wounds? Is there anything with that to lead to something that can accelerate wound closure? Because if a discovery could be made to accelerate wound healing, the recuperation times after surgeries could be cut down from weeks to just days.
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@captainMony
2 years ago
Yo Drop us the music link, it was getting heated !!
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@wojciechzakrzewski3709
1 year ago
where do they get extra material from?
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@DaWhitelisted
2 years ago
this will be recomended now in 4 years or if not in ten
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@IARRCSim
7 months ago
Preventing mainland Chinese doctors from overprescribing strong antibiotics would be a good step to prevent such antibiotic resistance too.
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@prototropo
1 year ago (edited)
I was fascinated that each new mitotic event seemed to oblige the daughter cells to slide along the side of her sister until she had grown its full length, and that landmark--the new end of one cell touching the old end of her sister--a new cell division is prompted.
Of course, what appears to be cell-to-cell surface signaling for triggering the internal mechanisms for mitotic division, may actually just coincide with whatever growth threshold is necessary for any cell to summon the resources sufficient to launch her clones. And it's only logical that the sufficient reserves would inevitably be reached at about the same size and length in every iteration. But then why the almost algorithmic adherencd in sliding along in maximal corporal contact?
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@Hazzard1324
1 year ago
so cool
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@andrewsheehy2441
3 months ago
We have absolutaly no idea about the foundational science that defines how this works.
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1 reply
@ximonwhhatt3796
2 years ago
I saw my cells divide when I was on LSD
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@joahn
2 years ago
I've studied some of this cell topic in college so this is incredible to me. Thank you youtube
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@grandwizzo4490
1 year ago
Trillion dollars of research.....worth it
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@emeraldlilacza6552
2 years ago
thats so cool dude
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@GcomIop
3 months ago
How many of you had your teacher showing you thing video?
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@derek20la
1 year ago
It's discrimination to judge the bacteria for having two cell walls.
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@gracio1231
2 years ago
Thanks :) it’s pretty neat n pretty
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@Jr_Scientist
1 year ago
Wow 😳
1
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@AnthonyVCL
4 months ago
Seeing that bacteria dividing made me hungry
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@amitweisbord9922
1 year ago
Fascinating, though early to celebrate. Implications of gained knowledge are not made clear in the video.
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@fanskucing597
1 year ago (edited)
No, I am not a medical student but I am interested
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@TheLastOilMan
1 year ago
Not sure what technique this is , but SEM can’t do soft tissue, maybe a drawing ?
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@MilMike
1 month ago
mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell
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@happydada1993
1 year ago
Good work, you're hired
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@sfsen
2 years ago
Props to the cameraman for shrinking to capture this.
Could have asked me for a better camera though.
I have better quality potatoes.
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@medfoto1
2 years ago
Wow.
1
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@dessiewatkins1565
6 months ago
I was thinking: Could the initial appearance of eukaryotic cells have been activated by an environmental trigger in which a prokarotic cell replicated only the cell wall, but failed to also replicate its dna, and then one of the cells reabsorbed the cell that was missing the copies of its dna?
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@kareltracy
2 years ago
I'm sure Leeuwenhoek would be impressed.
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@pillepolle3122
6 months ago (edited)
why are the divided bacteria suddenly the same size as before?
1
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1 reply
@kellwng
7 months ago
This is cool but I have one question can this affect human cells division?
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@apu3567
1 year ago
Mc'Donald's Sprite be like;
1
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@therealkRon1k
1 year ago
is this just everything on a small scale?
like looking at the universe/multiverse from the "outside"
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@williamkelly5567
4 months ago
God the CREATOR did this
1
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@SancteCuthberteOraProNobis
2 years ago
Interesting
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@Leveronicus
2 years ago
Interesting
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@adityalindson
2 years ago
I am an art and design student just here to motivate my scientist friends and say "GO SCIENCE!"
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@CableWrestler
2 years ago
I just spent all afternoon doing live updates to my own DNA, and now I've got to say, I'm really scared. I didn't factor any of this in to my work. I wondered why I've started to bruise easily and have plasma leak out of every pore and mucus membrane.
Pray for me.
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@viperdio69420
4 months ago
Lit real Harvard
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@snoowwe
1 year ago
ok but HOW is knowing how bacteria's cell walls divide going to help scientists improve antibiotics? I'm nopt doubting, I'm just curious since you said it twice but didn't explain how.
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1 reply
@JW-hf9ev
7 months ago
Wait, LISTEN CAREFULLY you can kinda hear “well there goes the neighborhood!” Ha
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@sendtoanthony
2 years ago
It's weird how bacteria is both helpful and harmful to us.
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@SuperlativeCG
2 years ago
It's a winning strategy.
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@The_Fancy_Duck
2 years ago
Someone needs to patch this infinite cell glitch.
1
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@FupaDoncic
2 years ago
Wow looks exactly like when my ex said she needed a break
1
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@oB_Session
1 year ago
Never-before-seen views of double-membraned bacteria as they divide = 795k views
A Kardashian eating an ice cream on a cone = 1 billion views
See the problem?
1
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@konig4765
1 year ago
Leaving this comment here before this gets recommended to everyone at 3 in the morning years from now
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@wavytidals
2 years ago
Imagine seeing cell division like never before
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@Rintoo_BD
8 months ago (edited)
All Praise to God Almighty, The Best and Wisest Creator. Thanks a lot for sharing
1
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1 reply
@beverlyshelton5680
1 year ago
it is very interesting
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@itzfrken
2 years ago
Glad I’m here early 😭
1
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@stevel5711
3 weeks ago
If some scientist was able to create the smallest "living motor" then maybe create the smallest wedge mechanism as well.
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@wadeodonoghue1887
6 months ago
Cell division is how our bodies heal as well, it's like a microscopic star-wars happening on our faces and in our bodies, clone armies, wookies, the light and dark side, and all of it so weird.
Like is an ocean wave the democratic expression of it's collective drops, in a similar way the microscopic things find expression in us on another yet related "plain". We however have now joined the conversation of life, as the microscopic beat all other life by double in time on this planet, is where the evidence points today.
So half of life on earth was "senseless" macroscopically, deaf, blind etc... so they might be weird and scary but like the Titans to the Greek Gods they are the womb from which we arise, rebel against and embrace.
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@UltimateEntity
2 years ago
Nowadays technology is godly crazy
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@Imnotplayinganymore
1 year ago
Always thought human life would end with a super resistant strain of bacteria. This gives me hope that I’m wrong.
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@gottabeinspiring
2 years ago
That's scary
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@iiihamzapoloiii
1 year ago
Too deep wow 🎉🎉
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@baconfilmproductions
4 months ago
Hey guys college dropout here! Wondering if we can program living robots to do certain jobs and take out certain bacterias .
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@CrowquillsCrowquillz
4 months ago
its not cell division, its cellular multiplication
1
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@RhumpleOriginal
1 year ago
Sure ok. Can we make portals yet? We need to ask the real questions.
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@Frilabird
2 years ago
here before a million views, just felt the need to say it
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@fozmex
1 year ago
Is the bacteria cell division analogous to a yeast cell division?
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@scott83gmail
1 year ago
When topics are debatable and Harvard is wrong they disable the comments to avoid their idiocy being challenged.
1
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@alhara4843
2 years ago
Self similarity fractal reproduction, mind blowing…
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@romz1
1 year ago
Is there nothing that can encase the bacteria so that when it does multiply, it has no space to multiply in to?
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@zza8392
2 years ago
wow thats cool
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@marufhasan1684
2 years ago
Get a better camera. Why the resolution is so low?
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@meonkrishnanan5920
2 years ago (edited)
Man it's crazy this process has been going on for billions of years I bet we'll change it for the better though because humans are special and not subject to nature so we can aways understand how our intercession will affect the world around us
Like plastic!
1
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@kafikafi
1 year ago
What movie is this?
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@Wulfjager
1 year ago
everyone running bacteria on Plague Inc is sweating bullets rn
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@tuxido4913
2 years ago (edited)
Very cool, fancy medical people 👍
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@martinlee6694
1 year ago
Wow!
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@practicalengineering6965
1 year ago
God is Awesome
1
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@crimpers5543
1 year ago
this video is too short. MORE
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@sufianaldib9469
1 month ago
Blessed Allah the greatest creator
1
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@JB_Hobbies
8 months ago
🚨The mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell.🚨
1
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1 reply
@Jivolt
1 year ago
Meanwhile on Facebook, an uncle thinks he knows more than scientists.
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@anonanon3066
2 years ago (edited)
And yet there's my university of applied computer sciences struggling to allow LaTeX generated pdfs for mid-semester submissions, only allowing ms word.
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@deaftodd
1 year ago
In real-time? That's phenomenal! It's like dropping blood in the ocean, and it will alert a shark far away in almost no time.
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@Kenneth_James
2 years ago
I want people to stop using the word 'crisis' for every problem in need of a solution.
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@Angel-tn4uj
2 years ago
eso es mucho más complejo de lo q se pensaba
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@Lucius_murrius
1 year ago
Still waiting for the end...
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@sk8erkenny
1 year ago
i love science
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@robertocavalheiro6445
6 months ago
Help my! This is dangerous!
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@nurulgoni4226
1 year ago
As showen , cell deviations, I would be greatfull if some one could explain , as each individual cell clones it self ,
My question is
In theory , after deviding it self the mass should not be the same size , where does the constant mass after each cloning takes place come from .
One after another constant deviations of cloning take place , Iam unable to accept there isn’t a source of continued mass creation from thin air .
Perhaps the original creator of cell cloning / deviations
Have left answers for us to find .
Q:- where exactly does the continued mass magically appears on the spot .
That should not be possible
Please advise
Nurul goni
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@sid2112
7 months ago
Who'd ya plagiarize this off of?
1
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@johanindrapermana7328
1 month ago
Rhe amazinf part is, how fast the DNA replication is. It's magical.
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@Flodar_Eltih
1 month ago
Greetings to the cell workers, the girl he loves, who lives in the next neighborhood and is suddenly separated from her even with a visa.
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@alexabadi7458
2 years ago
nice
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@Sunflower-vd1jj
1 year ago
Can't believe I'm seeing this early 🤩
1
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@ravinosaurus
2 years ago
E.Coli after seeing this video:
Alright, soldiers. Plan B
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@jelen2579
1 year ago
This is cool🤩
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@Golden_Pomegranate_Studios
1 year ago
Cool
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@Therisis_GraveReader
2 years ago
Wow, I've literally doesn't know that
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@ultrabumblebee
2 years ago
Very cool and now I have the urge to wash my hands, even though I don't really need to at this current moment 😆😆👏
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@kevinazim5133
1 month ago
Does omeone know in how much time a cell like this divides itself ?
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@whyismynamehere
2 years ago
People saying that this is interesting bruh I say this is amazing
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@rendermanpro
5 months ago
How from 320x240 or less video from microscope you get 3D model.... and even see a separation hole under division with depth, and it is not just reconstruction low res meshing error. A bit questionable...... Like an ad, you watch something about amazing product, going to buy it, and at home find that it is not like it was in the ad. 🤔 Another question, with that development level of science someone already wanna make gen modifications ASAP, while fully not understand yet even fundamentals of life. Like an new age alchemy.....
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@adzimcherry8591
2 months ago
Is this real time speed? 😮
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@Tenshihan-Quinn
2 years ago
I'm seeing cymatic resonance patterns all over the cell walls. Interesting.
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@aniksamiurrahman6365
1 year ago
Anyone has the link of the paper?
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@samscrib8719
2 years ago
Looks like magic
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@victorwait6949
2 years ago
what is this? why so short movie?
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@PerspectiveEngineer
8 months ago
Wow!
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@downundabrotha
1 year ago
Oof That Cell was Clapping them cheeks before Abandoning his Wife and Kids
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@apontutul
3 months ago
I feel jealous of today's school kids science practicals
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@tombuckshum9323
1 year ago
im here 14hrs before my Biology HSC. so thats fun
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@yomo68
2 years ago
Beautiful! Now this data can be fed into machine learning database in order to make a proper and effective anti-biotic...
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@Evercreeper
2 years ago
A combination of atoms just learning to copy itself hurts my brain
1
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1 reply
@KF-bj3ce
1 year ago
Humanities at its best.
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@lukeismael4218
2 years ago
Just wanted to comment so I can watch this video in the future and be like “I saw it happen early.”
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@anas.g
2 years ago
How about growing limbs back?
1
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@sherifbatawy
2 years ago
سبحان الله وبحمده.. سبحان الله العظيم
Glory to Allah, the wise creator of these microorganisms
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@1mmickk
7 months ago
Not slowing down the video is really a poor decision.
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@timehasstoppedandthefunbeg4467
2 years ago
I was in a med school for 1 month, so sad this is what i miss by leaving it
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1 reply
@JoshuaLandsberg-w2n
8 months ago
What is our universe is just a peace of a cell under a microscope?
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@autonomousfortune753
2 years ago
We all know this will show up again in 12 years. See y'all next time!
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@Down_bad_cockroach
1 year ago
Thx yt
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@Lucius_Chiaraviglio
2 years ago
I wish the video said what they stained with . . . .
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@asheep7797
8 months ago
Oh... WOW
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@justingood1443
7 months ago
This is REAL TIME?? WOW
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@Vugen18
7 months ago
Neat! Also just find more types of antibiotics , just needs funding.
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@skipslash7367
8 months ago
i love biology
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@ravensiIva
2 years ago
This looks like an OG vid. See you again in 10 years lol
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@TuanNguyen-ed9rb
1 year ago
So many things human don't know about, from microscopic to universe scale
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@gaylecheung3087
2 years ago
What nightmares come from!
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@TimeYetWork
2 years ago
I love learning new scientific discoveries, we get a better understanding of God’s brilliant design
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@shawtynoikilpeople3905
1 year ago
Actually, I HAVE seen this before.
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@christinegerard4974
6 months ago
Emotional…
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@theophrastus3.056
8 months ago
Are we sure Harvard didn’t just copy someone else’s research? Apparently even their President has no problem with plagiarism.
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@YouCanDoX
1 year ago
So u need to get the medicine in right at or right before cell division maybe
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@DrVonNostrand
2 years ago
Cell Division - Harvard will Tear Us Apart
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@YAEMlKO
2 years ago (edited)
Wow just 6 days old? I consider this early
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@kshitijjadhav9205
8 months ago
Cool
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@thaakillahh
2 years ago
Weird recommendation but fucking COOL.
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@soggykabasi449
2 years ago
i'm high asf this looks cool do i switch majors rq?
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@CyberBeep_kenshi
2 years ago
Science is so cool :)
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@lotte5173
1 year ago
God is AWESOME !!!
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@rcane6842
4 months ago
my brain getting stonks at 3am again
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@doctorz3518
1 year ago (edited)
Sheeshhh
I hope virology will be expounded more in the next 3-4 years.
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@chashmal10
7 months ago
People will look you in the face and say this just happens randomly and first happened randomly and it’s all random with no shame 💀
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4 replies
@davecrupel2817
8 months ago
Isn't Harvard supposed to be a law school?
1
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@Al-zm2sc
1 year ago
wow,,, how the hell did we go from stone hatchets to this technology?
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@Quadrer93
2 years ago
All this, while securty camera still records in 240p.
1
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1 reply
@raindrop6942
2 years ago
thought this was from 6 years ago at first but no 6 days huh
1
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@omnamahshivaye819
1 year ago
Didn’t understand anything but im happy
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@lijp24
1 year ago
And people still think this all happened "by chance"
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@smevox7490
7 months ago
Remember. We came about by randomness. All of this is randomness.
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@JohnD6280
1 month ago
Thank you China for this awesome discovery.
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@ashraf2661
4 months ago
Subhan'Allah !!
1
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1 reply
@oiko2k4
7 months ago
This video was recommended after watching a GTA V theme song cover. Same mood. Those shots are gangsta.
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@khalidalshatri3267
2 years ago
As expected from Harvard
1
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@ozone2126
2 years ago (edited)
Push pull and normal?? Wat.. I thought it was push pull and legs
2
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@Kaiju4
4 months ago
Why did this show up in my recommendation page
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@fakeaccount7913
1 year ago
Still cannot cure cancer.
1
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@guywhosellsvapes4595
2 years ago
They should probably start using this to separate each gene.
It'd make it easier to modify our genetics against disease.
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2 replies
@kusmardiyantototok946
6 months ago (edited)
as we can see that is how God grows and breeds cell
1
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@j.stalin953
2 years ago
It's what happening right now in our body
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@This-Is-The-End
7 months ago
It's Alive!
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@erwancerentio2495
8 months ago
I bet the script narrated is the Abstracs of the Research Journal
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@rb1471
1 year ago
I don't see how the goal and the study relate at all tbh. Perhaps explaining how or why would help.
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@roughtimeroach
2 years ago
millions into research, $10 into mic
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@MikeHunt-c5p
6 months ago
Saw a maggot turn into a fly before my eyes, amazing
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@cole9799
8 months ago
Yay science!
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@wellokayyes1266
1 year ago
Hell yeah.
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@PigeonFlare
2 years ago
Como..
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@jackpaul7102
7 months ago
Humans trying to understand biology.
Nature: get on my level bruh
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@joshuayolles6962
1 year ago
Epic
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@NothingMuchHereToSay
2 years ago
I have ecoli in my bowels, I'm officially a survivor.
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@theGoogol
2 years ago
Bacterial anti-resistance is nature's answer to overuse of antibiotics.
What will nature's answer to this be, in the long run?
1
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@Owl90
2 years ago
Now that's some fucking technology right there, holy crap!
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@Harshhhvardhan
1 year ago
humanity ain't that bad
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@RonColeArt
7 months ago
The voice over described the newly formed cell as a "daughter" cell. The word "daughter" describes a female child of a parent. This confirms that it is correct to refer to the first cell of a human being as a child. I realize that might seem unimportant but, for some reason it becomes a point of contention whenever I refer to the first cell of a human being as a child to any supporter of abortion, in which case they will in the vast majority of cases immediately claim I'm lying about "it" being a child and accuse me of using scientifically inaccurate and emotionally charged language. We have no trouble at all recognizing single celled organisms such as paramecium and amoebas as alive, interacting with their environment, sensing things, hunting, eating and repelling away from danger... yet when the single celled life form before us has human DNA, abortion supporters reject those concepts and begin describing "it" as a thing devoid of any signs of life or ability to sense or interact with "it's" environment.
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@nascarcricketer4702
2 years ago
Really goes to show we’re living in a world of discovery
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1 reply
@ellenlucia1088
1 year ago
Ok but anyone else think they're kind of cute? Just tiny blobs doing tiny blob stuff
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@TheMrKeksLp
2 years ago
Holy shit, as a realtime graphics developer I have trouble seeing the problem when I can debug the whole frame including all render passes etc I cannot imagine how hard it must be for a bio researcher to get any information out of (pretty) low res color-only images. For god sake I atleast have precise positions, normals, texture coordinates and so on
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@connordarvall8482
2 years ago
Since a 3D model of a microbe can be made with modern microscopes, I wonder how long it will be before we can 3D print bacteria.
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1 reply
@moinuddinkhan593
2 years ago
Thank you all the cells of my body for supporting me & continuing to do so.
Don't worry I will continue to supply materials which you need . Just one request, don't deposit extra fat inside my blood vessels. Can you somehow put them in large intestine, I will do rest of my job.
Stay safe
Stay strong
Keep dividing .
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@ArtisanTony
1 year ago
This should be the top priority for research in these days of gain of function research. We need weapons to fight bioterrorism!
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@Livebroadcast
1 year ago
Proof of a creator
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1 reply
@Livinghighandwise
2 years ago
This is just an ad for Harvard. This is not the first time this type of study has been done.
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@donbruce8234
1 year ago
They put that tag on this video, great, now I can't trust it.
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@jerrypolverino6025
1 year ago
Wow
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@Yoctopory
2 years ago
Wow
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@DAMusic-qu2ec
2 years ago
I know it’s an important field, but am I the only person who finds micro biology extremely boring?
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@JungKookOfficiaI
1 year ago
wow
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@azophi
2 years ago
Remember folks to double a number in binary just left shift it once
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@dlibby4979
1 year ago
Well now I know.
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@Doragoo
1 year ago
Marking my existence here.
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@reconnaissance7372
2 years ago
I dropped out but because of YouTube I know what I'm looking at.
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@janealamjanealam-qd2qj
1 month ago
I know that cell decides.but how , now I see.
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@josefy2013
1 year ago
that sure was cell division like ive never seen it before
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@milind1051
2 years ago
shoutout to science dawg
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@alzack112
1 year ago
Somehow, I always thought that microorganisms just went and ignored the law of creation.
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@johnpatton7533
1 year ago
cool
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@elbarto8282
2 years ago
I don't know shit but can't we see like atoms at the same definition? Why does it look so bad if it's way bigger than an atom?
1
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@weakw1ll
2 years ago
0:55 w fellas
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@DooubleTap
2 years ago
When we will gain total control over the cells of our body, immortality will be possible. I was born too early :(
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@pnuema1.618
2 years ago
It's all just code in the end
1
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@krono6606
8 months ago
It’s just so insane and mind blowing to me how cells and other stuff in our bodies just know what to do and how to do it without even being conscious or anything… it’s like magic
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9 replies
@das.gegenmittel
1 year ago
wow
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@freddyplunkett6281
2 years ago
wow
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@aidanlolzies
2 years ago
wow
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@CheeseBuddies
8 months ago
Wow
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@thehatman3089
1 year ago (edited)
We praise the human mind but we forget to praise The One who gave us our mind. The Master Mind a living being but has all knowledge, all power. If you can accept a human being, you can also consider atleast consider key words consider that there is a One Being. This video proves that how does it "Bacteria" do it by itself why doesn't it form to be the MOST KNOWLEDGEABLE OF ALL AND LAL POWERFUL AND NEVER DIE. THERE IS SOMEONE WHO IS GIVING ORDER this explanation makes more sense. Very educational video but please consider possibly that there could be a One Creater
If there is know we need to change our lives because we will be returning back to Him. I would say worship him Alone and get closer to Him. Just like you get closer to your parents He gave you your loved ones think about it be wise think right.
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@creamcheeseandpirates
2 years ago
I’m gonna act like I understood a word of that 😭 rlly cool though, I learned something new
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@CookingWithCows
1 year ago
I found it surprising that these fuckers divide so rapidly. Like they're literally just done dividing and boom! Another division. As I have learned the cell goes through a whole cycle of condensing and expanding and multiplying the DNA before division, but I didn't expect it to be so rapid. Of course the video may be sped up but still..
1
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@katijung6387
7 months ago
found this on my recommended, maybe this is a sign that I can study in Harvard😂😂
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@turkigo7057
1 year ago
cool stuff, getting close to cure cancer hopefully 🙏❤️
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@BarnardClangdeggin
4 months ago
Harvard is doing science?
2
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@glennlopez6772
8 months ago
Perhaps it would be nice to view comments wanting to know how, this video could educate the simple viewer!
Or does it mean that antibiotics could always be challenged by these pathogens, as time goes by?
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@mrchickennugg8855
1 year ago
actually no
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@karinjohnstone1653
2 years ago
T
As amazing as this is, it is "just" an example of binary fission. Imagine the mind boggling things that go on in mitosis... involving chromosomes and spindles.... and then, just to ramp it up a bit more, the situation with meiosis..... the idea of "evolution" - that this all just randomly happened, is ridiculous. It may have seemed plausible when microscopes revealed nothing but a blob of cytoplasm, but now that we know what actually goes on it's time to re-think and be honest about the processes of life. God deserves His glory and worship.
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@millenialmusings8451
1 year ago
Life is the source of all evil and suffering
1
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@doris.pretell
1 year ago
i love
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@likeablekiwi6265
4 months ago
One of these days a game controlling nanomites to kill germs in our bodies will come to exist.
1
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@traida111
1 year ago
cheeky little buggers aint they?
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@ratchetheros
1 year ago
As a programmer, when I heard about "instructions" first thing i thought was it's like somebody put code inside the cell so that they can perform their operations by themselves. Point is, WHO put the code in there? I mean, when this bacterium originated, who or what put these instructions in the first bacterium so that it could subsequently spread to other bacteria??? It's crazy
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@pubfixture
7 months ago
bY ceLl yUo MeAn ChiLd ! HoW ManY cHilDreN haVe You MurDeDEreD tO MaKe ThiS DiScoVeRy!!!
1
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@STroB
2 years ago
Am I the only one wondering how the hell these creatures divide themselves and the resulting cells are the same size as the original cell...?
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@-fv
1 year ago
Ratio then
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@PianoUniverse
1 year ago
And remember this is going on in your colon right now,
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@Shay-i4n
5 months ago
Ye❤
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@peternyc
8 months ago
I don't understand "push" and "pull."
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2 replies
@ImTheReal
1 year ago
Full meal outside the cell
How much that bacteria can grow in fact?
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@lethalgaming9209
2 years ago
An intellectual when seeing the thumbnail: A video about bacterial binary fission? laughs in British Ah, yes. I hypothesize my IQ will increase by approximately .23 points after absorbing this delectable curated scientific knowledge
Me when seeing the thumbnail: Damn, that kinda look like boobies
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1 reply
@skymaster0yt
1 year ago
how
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@pgc6290
6 months ago
So we know dna in detail but not this. Why?
1
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@rolandgerard6064
1 year ago
YHWH is amazing in his creation.
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@thunderhawk11
2 years ago
Starcraft Terran Adjutant .. Is that you?
1
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1 reply
@briansanims1507
3 weeks ago
“Matter cannot be created or destroyed.”
Living beings:
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1 reply
@limiv5272
2 years ago
I expected to get at least a sentence about what was marked in those cells, but apparently this is just pretty pictures. Very disappointing.
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@RonaldMoreira123
1 year ago
Hey algorithm send me more of this
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@theart8039
1 year ago
Yikes!!!! why did You Tube suggest this to me? I'm interested in Biology but never look for it so how did they know? my research is done in another place..super creepy
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@TyrooShino
1 year ago
Well for most bacteria and viruses... just don't be obese and unfit. We should've learned that over the past few years but McDonald's sure made a profit.
1
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@sutediheriyonoBaladMaUng
1 month ago
We call it multiverse.
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@zhouwu
1 year ago
The question now is how.
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@mariovidmar7
1 year ago
Did you ever tried that with xenobots, artificial organic robots (cell devision ) you could in theory grow up human embryo out of them (possibilities are endless) by genetically modified /programing them with strands of human DNA (two xenomorphs one to be eggs other to be a spermatozoon ) .
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@rx10
2 years ago
Amazed at the video, and wondering why the fuck Im not subscribed to this channel.
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@pklm7403
1 year ago
سبحان الله هذا خلق الله فأروني ماذا خلق الذين من دونه
1
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@ArunjyotiRath
6 months ago
Please make a dedicated video on this.Please condemn the act of China's Deployment.😢😢
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@yacoubhijazeen9934
2 years ago
fk now i have to study this sh!t, and know all the details.
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@dustynyoom
2 years ago
i can't even name the stages of cell division
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@botbaki9303
2 years ago
Programmable materials, transformio
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@thomasm514
7 months ago
If we can identify mutant cell division, what about applications for cancer!
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1 reply
@examplerkey
1 year ago
God help us.
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@Rising_Pho3nix_23
1 year ago
What I expected: To see cell division as the title directly states
What I got: A sales pitch for a research grant.
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@drsuicide8474
1 year ago
What was the race of the researcher and which race could benefit? Shouldnt we know this first before moving forward?
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@kismetology8031
1 month ago
so this is seeing?
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@hughjanus6975
7 months ago
Excuse me, did she say "global antibiotic resistance health crisis“?
1
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1 reply
@eymannassole6162
2 years ago
It's like if you snap a bar magnet in half, then in half, then in half...
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1 reply
@pizizhangsg1319
1 month ago
It shows that all sciences are physic.
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@elizabethbrauer1118
1 year ago
Despite the trillions of dollars pumped into private and public medical schools, worldwide medical research, and the US govt, this method of microscopy+tomography was invented in the 21st century, not the 20th century. Microscopes were invented in the 1600s, while digital cameras started to be developed in the 1950s. Yet Harvard is only now developing this cutting edge technology. 🧐🧐🧐
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@AlienEntity90
7 months ago
HOW FRUITFUL
1
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@rastar97
7 months ago
What if we inhibited the immune system of the virus and slowed what is clearly electron transport for less transmission of diseases.
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@aadityaaaaaaaaaaa
1 year ago
So here is the money of Harvard goes
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@spacewater5866
1 year ago
But WHY does it divide up into two.
Whats the "need" it had to do so? 🤔
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3 replies
@urbanwarchief
1 year ago
I'm some dude on the shitter up north at 2:00 am.... this is more interesting than politics nowadays
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@441milachik
1 year ago
Antibiotic-resistance? I thought that you have bacteriophage for that?
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@Sunnypink2006
1 year ago
damn, who was the camera man?
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@pointlessmanatee
7 months ago
I never want to go to the bacteria kingdom
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@Nvshvil
7 months ago
jorkin it to this
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@asmiroy2926
2 years ago (edited)
how did we start off with stone tools and get here😭
1
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1 reply
@dadlord689
2 years ago
Where are the organelles?
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3 replies
@wisehatYT
7 months ago
*SNORE* **whistle**
*SNORE* **whistle**
*SNORE* **whistle**
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@navajoauckland6003
2 years ago
I struggle trying to break my weetbix apart this is
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@RuhanshSingh
7 months ago
Hi
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@empfied
2 years ago
i feel smart
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@sane4766
1 year ago
🔥🔥🔥
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@liberalmonk839
2 years ago
💡Thanks, with this I understood how to reproduce myself myself myself myself myself myself myself myself 👥👥👥👥👥👥👥👥👥👥👥
1
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@rmhminiman
2 years ago
GG to high school students
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@huang5964
1 year ago
woah
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@Rich-je9fy
1 year ago
Wow! God is wonderful!
1
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@azrailoh6994
2 years ago
Mmm preety cool
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@onemoresob1022
7 months ago
neat
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@Baran_124
1 year ago
I thought those were a pair of nuts in the thumbnail 💀
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@shai17altamiranoanco77
1 year ago
Yeee
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@mollysurey6058
1 year ago
harsh audio ruins this
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@itskittyme
8 months ago
I'm in an action movie now
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@fantom-spektr
2 years ago
so, YouTube recommended bacteria pron
Time to get busy! 💪👌👉💧
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@legoworks-cg5hk
2 years ago
We now have 3d models of bacteria… what
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@apollocobain8363
1 year ago
why are there no images of viruses?
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@merrihaven
1 year ago
Shatter the buggers with the right frequency Ghrtz. 😅
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@killjoy1301
2 years ago
why are you lying? this was done over 100 years ago under microscopes...
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1 reply
@stevemorris6855
2 years ago
Where are the science deniers??🇬🇧
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@anekdoche7055
1 year ago
when you exist:
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@OLomasO
2 years ago
Gotta throw in that fear mongering at the end of the video.
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@Nintendo64billion
6 months ago
This is someones hell.
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@eraysunar
1 year ago
Woah
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@user-bf6gz8ej4o
2 years ago
Lil bit of gorilla glue and the problem is solved👌
1
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@LakayaJohnson
1 year ago
Isn't God wonderful? 🥰✝️💜
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1 reply
@TripTheFlip
2 years ago
0:52 I pogged
1
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@warrax111
7 months ago
They want us to believe, that this all happened by random accident by itself.
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2 replies
@sallom531
1 year ago
that's God's Creation
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@sherifbatawy
2 years ago
سبحان الله وبحمده.. سبحان الله العظيم
Glory to Allah, the wise creator of these microorganisms
1
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@believe2261
1 year ago
JESUS CHRIST IS THE WAY THE TRUTH AND THE LIFE!!! TURN TO HIM BEFORE ITS TOO LATE !!!
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@FallenDevi.
3 months ago
Neuron activation
1
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@christinakaushalDO
1 year ago
No drugs pleased
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@nat9837
2 years ago
😨 woahh
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@kaneed2769
7 months ago
The things humans have made of sticks and stones is wild...
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@theIAMwithin
1 year ago
Before falling for such a claim, I will need to see the new technology that can provide such videos, if not CGI.
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@JD-ov5gt
1 year ago
Long as the winklevoss twins don’t try to steal it we’re good 👍
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@frankoptis
2 years ago (edited)
There would be no antibiotics health crisis if you guys in the US wouldnt be handing out antibiotics like candy. Just check your studies regarding restiance levels in Germany vs US.
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@enthoo7902
1 year ago
As long as you don't research gain of function and attempt to make ecoli more transmittable and deadly
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@Adam_Antium115
2 years ago
What about the cancer problem?
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@Knytz
2 years ago
What has science become
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@Melihkoctas
2 years ago
I was here
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@PhunkBustA
2 years ago
i think fighting antibiotic resistance is a bad idea, its not the kind of thing i would want to hedge a bet on
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@Smuth_Op
8 months ago
Harvard........................another 4 sec wasted for writing this comment ("depends on the context")
1
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@aaronjennings8385
1 year ago
Weirdly, I felt ill watching this.
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@FLAMEalan
2 years ago
How to crush it
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@Hermes.Trismegistus.
7 months ago
Wonderful how the place now known for its rampant and unhinged plagiarism has a banner at the top letting us know its an accredited school. This means so very little in the face of Claudine Gay's downfall.
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@mickcarson8504
1 year ago
Oh, dont worry, we won't live forever 😪
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@jordanhamm9175
1 year ago
And all created in 6 days by the spoken word of God.
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@PhaseSkater
2 years ago
announcer sounds dead inside...
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@interstateneek
2 years ago
Now we know why the Eiffel Tower was built.
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@demetresimisiroglou9342
1 year ago
What causes a branch to sprout out of a tree? There you’ll find your answer that you’re looking for.
Don’t mind me. I’m just a nut.
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@evil_dogboyF4ngz
2 years ago
I watch memes most of the time but this cool too
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@bramGi
1 year ago
I see yall at daily dose of internet
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@asliketheson
7 months ago
It’s just cells though
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@madwhitehare3635
2 years ago
God rocks.
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@bluesdirt6555
1 month ago
Looks like the surface of the sun!
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@anonsurfer
1 year ago
You have to wonder if the Big Bang itself is a form of cell division where our universe splits from another universe in a larger multiverse...
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@scottruiz6645
1 year ago
YES PLEASE 🎃🎉
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@yasheng
2 years ago
It's annoying to mix objective and subjective claims -- feels rather like ads.
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@B_R_Nahor7654
8 months ago
Just when I thought Science was not sciencing
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@mikeno.9308
2 years ago
“Mutants” sounds a lot like “gain of function”
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@chrislee176
1 year ago
As a taxpayer, when I hear someone talk about ‘global crisis’, I know they’re setting the groundwork to lobby the government to go after my earnings to force fund their noble endeavours.
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@mus3204
8 months ago
MASHALLAH.
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@Kevin_A
1 year ago
Eh
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@myceliasedits2704
2 years ago
Where my mitochondria chads at
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@saukush0420
2 years ago
Thats some higher education mann
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@L_TL
2 months ago
طلاب السادس اين انتم؟
1
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@tigertiger1699
8 months ago
🙏🙏🙏🙏 clever👍
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@bigrock8752
1 year ago
My parents' marriage be like:
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@KickOutTheJhm
2 years ago
The guiding force for these “bodies” are from another realm. In other words there is a spiritual force that guides the operation of these bacteria and its seen even more in the case of virals, they have all of their “life” in another realm and only a portion of it in this realm.
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12 replies
@silverbemyname
1 year ago
"And we're seeing this folks. We are seeing cell division like never before. You've never seen anything like it. It will be the best cell division of all the division." Trump
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@josephujiadughele6035
1 year ago
So which scientific object can be made as a replica of this study.
Let's be fast.
Medical
Military
Household
Industrial
Etc
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@Xubair313
1 year ago
Allah is the greatest. The mighty creator and The only Planner,
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@johnc8209
1 year ago
Like never before? My 8th grade biology book looked just like this. Glad they wasted the money
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@nicholasalbeck7114
7 months ago
Nerrrrrds!!!
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@anthonybell3036
1 year ago
But can you heal me after being dosed raped poisoned and tortured for years? That is the question
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@Knuckles2761
8 months ago
Bacteria R34, huh? Not bad.
1
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1 reply
@mutantthegreat7963
7 months ago
Evolved from a rock.
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@guylikesbananas3986
8 months ago
Cool 1 year ago
1.8m view
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@riazijabar5296
1 year ago (edited)
Doing a level s i thinks this worth now .
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@Doug_Fany
2 years ago
Yep, the year is 2046. We developed nano machines son, they react to binary patterns we made up
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@bio366geethasankar7
8 months ago
🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
1
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@bramblemat
8 months ago
Microzymas
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@SawarimHaqq
1 year ago
SubhanAllah!
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@smckay6438
8 months ago
That is two universes multiplying from the big bang !
The big bang is the closing of the edges!
PROVE ME WRONG 😂😂😂😂
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@hammadhaider
2 years ago
This helps me understand the teenage mutant ninja turtles
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@maghco4441
2 years ago
Ow
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@hypemugen
2 years ago
why such a low quality microphone...
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@opalfishsparklequasar8663
1 year ago
👉🤡 0:24 - highly technical
& accurate cell wall diagram.
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@anna-ummsuf
2 years ago
bacteria, brace yourselves
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@pratonicolas87
1 year ago
this is amazing one kiss from argentina. carajo se los voy a mostrar a mis hijos a ver si les pica el bicho de la biologia celular.
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@panthar7036
2 years ago (edited)
Pov : you are this vedio in 144p
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@discerningacumen
1 year ago
Don't you see how great God is?
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1 reply
@0ptiplex.360
2 years ago
All that innovation and yet their YouTube channel can't afford a decent studio microphone. This sounds like listening to someone talking on their earbuds
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@grim_bbx2241
1 year ago
Its all fractals man
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@the_doncorleone
2 years ago
And to think I eat this for breakfast
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@hexagono2187
1 year ago
Technology.
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@ghassanalam2114
2 years ago
HD
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@Phymacss
8 months ago
❤
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@robertkreiling1746
1 year ago
Intelligent design for all to see !
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1 reply
@theelderzoo9775
1 year ago
WHERE IS THE CENTROSOME 😱
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@lujixcjml
1 year ago
Oooo
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@Voltroid69
2 years ago
Basically just agario
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@papa_leak
4 months ago
Use HEAT rouds that what i do whe my enemy has extra armour
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@br2266
1 year ago
So basically they could afford the one tool that detects it… so it’s not Harvard as much as it is the manufacturer of the product. Lol
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@Metal-and-Mythos
2 years ago
Only Harvard can mess up video profiling😂😂😂😂
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@weakw1ll
2 years ago
Me everyday:
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@adamcastle3410
2 years ago
Welp if this becomes anything like horror games, this is the part when we get good news right before its the end of the world :P
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@uhadme
3 weeks ago
Lot of promises over the past 3500 years, not one came true.
No world doom, no end of tears/suffering.
Status Quo always wins, stop imagining you make nature more perfect.
Thanks
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@whale2710
2 years ago
Sick
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@gGorpus
1 year ago
Easy: o 0 8 oo that’s cell division
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@Em0killer13
1 year ago
Oh please. Antibiotic resistant bacteria? Immunomodulators. p53 gene regulation, apoptosis inducers, differentiation regulators (polyamines, etc..). Problem solved.
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@Gretanit
8 months ago
ясно школа
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@bronzejourney5784
1 year ago
1:02 Alabama moment.
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@dinr3591
1 year ago
❤
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@lauram9478
1 year ago
❤
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@jeffreyenglish1815
2 years ago
Watch out! It’s a baby!
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@ben10___uwu
1 year ago
i dont get anything tbh, im just eating a cookie wb yall?
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@GucciLee27
2 years ago
I can't comprehend this... This is why I'm in business
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@Nobody_Here_Except-Us_Ghosts
1 year ago
There so similar to nano technology.
If nano technology became biological how similar would look to us or is it simply a case of visa versa.
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@Yo-Me
2 years ago
Jesus Christ, I'm so stupid that half the terms here didn't even sound like words to me.
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1 reply
@B33F22
2 years ago
Will the science nuts create more bio-weapons with this discovery?
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@RageMinecraft1
2 years ago
Even in the smallest level, something is moving all of this. Something which we can't see with our two eyes, but its clear once you open your mind
2
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3 replies
@perseus9428
1 year ago
Isn't Youtube great?
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@samiulhaquerounok5787
1 year ago
❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
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@dh8956
1 year ago
Is this how a Boston college was able to increase mortality rates for "the china virus"? Define and pinpoint weaknesses of cell division and infiltrate? Or is Harvard just working to improve cancer?
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@pixelstukov3816
2 years ago
what
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@sa3270
7 months ago
Can they figure out how to use this to grow Joe Biden a few more brain cells?
1
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@tigertiger1699
1 year ago
🙏🤯
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@DigitalEdward
1 year ago
still nothing told.
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@stevencameron1562
8 months ago
Yeah but it's harvard so it can't really be taken seriously.
1
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@dimitrisivak738
2 years ago
E coli is in most water - it's not that dangerous
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@OMNICHROMATICA
7 months ago
ha
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@amelietrue
2 years ago
Holy shit
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@greenergrassgames
2 years ago
Isn't this more of a feat in engineering than medicine?
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@takedown205productions6
2 years ago
Howabout, instead of investing so much into observing the same process we've seen across the animal kingdom, and instead invest in bacterophage study? We wouldn't have to worry about infectious bacteria, if we can control simple viruses that do less damage overall, than a course of antibiotics.
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2 replies
@alexplaytop
6 months ago
What next in small world into NOTHING???
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@Lemantra
7 months ago
I dont remember asking
1
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@desktorp
1 year ago
They can't figure out how to get drugs thru the cell wall, in to the bacteria.. they should just ask my aunt-- she's an expert on getting drugs in to stuff
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@Sjakal
1 year ago
whaoops
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@The.Drunk-Koala
2 years ago
Unicellular bacterial are harder to kill
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@wanderinginterneter8203
2 years ago
Irl duplication glitch
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@blueeyes8131
2 years ago
Hardvard
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@warrax111
7 months ago
why modern women have so unsympathetic voice?
1
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@rj73896
2 years ago
Omg
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@nekodelightma2752
2 years ago (edited)
Youtube algorithm:🤓🤓🤓🤓
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@edwinlipton
3 weeks ago
Your seeing cell division, I'm seeing, "hick-up",, scuse me, double.
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@TruckTaxiMoveIt
1 year ago
Yeah, completely random an arbitrary activity
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@saliqbhat500
8 months ago
MASHALLAH.
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1 reply
@celebalert5616
2 years ago
Yawn ... I have seen it like this before ... just good eyesight I guess 😌
2
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4 replies
@hamburgerhamburgerv2
2 years ago
where the color?
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@88997799
1 year ago
I’ll take one new body about 18 years of age.
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@rubiks6
2 years ago
There are folks who actually believe researchers can create life in a laboratory. Researchers are still trying to understand cell division.
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3 replies
@cyphershell
2 years ago
"mutants"
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@BHARGAV_GAJJAR
2 years ago
hey nanobot can push through that hole if activated at the right time
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@justingood1443
2 years ago
God damn…
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1 reply
@X-OR_
1 year ago
Big Deal, Cell Division is easy. Let's see Cells do the Pythagorean theorem.............
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@deanevangelista6359
7 months ago
Cells are great at division and multiplication, but their skills in algebra leave much to be desired.
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@janela424
2 years ago
Is this cell alive?
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@68Tboy
2 years ago
Is a single cell alive?
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@MrOrangeonion
2 years ago (edited)
that hole.... that doesnt actually exist though. @0:59 they theorising that it exists
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@karezaalonso7110
1 year ago
No actual results yet I guess, but keep hope alive.
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@nadeem5476
1 year ago
SubhanALLAH
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@thobyfevo
1 year ago
All of this work for most people to be unable to access it because it's being sold at a profit 😂
Or not even be sold at all and just reserved for the 1% 😃🤪
Reply
@asliketheson
7 months ago
Now lie and tell me that’s not a distinct human .
Reply
@pautassiummm
2 years ago
reco
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