Discover more about DNA, genes and genomes, and the implications for our health and society. yourgenome is produced by the Public Engagement team at the Wellcome Genome Campus.
Genuinely been learning biology for 2 years now and this is one thing I found hard to understand but within one video, and a day before the final exam I finally get it. Thanks.
DNA - mRNA - Protein mRNA cannot affect DNA unless in the presence of reverse transcriptase new studies came out that we already have reverse transcriptase in our liver cells and mRNA vaccine is converted to DNA in the liver.
What's the mechanism that causes these enzymes to act the way they do? In other words, why does one enzyme cut the DNA strand in half and how does it know where to cut it? How does another enzyme know how to replicate the matching pairs to create a new strand of DNA?
How can one not believe there's external intelligence responsible for all this. The mind-boggling part is all this are formed from billions simple balls orbiting other balls they are arranged in such a way that new and highly. Complex entities are formed. There's definitely a God out there our mind are too insignificant to comprehend this God in its fullness. All we do is bring things down to our capacity.
Am not even sure we really know much about everything in this process. It will definitely be updated in the future. Shows the wisdom of God is incredible ❤
Looking at (time: 2:03~2:07), the amino acid of the tRNA is attached to the 5' end. The amino acid must be attached to the 3' end of the tRNA 3'-UCA-5' attached to the mRNA.
Thanks for a fine video. I do believe that some folding of at least some proteins occurs before the protein is finished. Final folding likely occurs after the protein is fully formed and removed from the ribosome which made the protein.