Your content is great 🎉. It clear things from the base and help you understand the concepts. Your videos, especially the one on nucleotides helped me a lot, scored good in exams. Thank you 😄. Just a small request, if possible, can you make a video about the Human Genome Project 🧬?
Thank you so much for the kind words! ❤ As for your suggestion: that's a great idea! We have that topic on our to-do 😊list. It may take some time until we publish the video, however. These videos take a bit of time to produce. Stay tuned as we will publish more in the near future! 😊
Thank you! 😊 You are correct. Most references state that there are 9 essential and 11 nonessential amino acids, which I also show in the video (when I split the amino acids on the screen). However, I mentioned later that there are "about 10 essential and 10 nonessential", which might sound confusing. Here's what the literature says about this: "A consensus of current nutritional opinion indicates that the l isomers of 10 amino acids - arginine, histidine, isoleucine, leucine, lysine, methionine, phenyl-alanine, threonine, tryptophan, and valine - are considered to be essential for mammals, including humans. The designations of essential and nonessential amino acids refer to the needs of an organism under a particular set of conditions. Thus essential amino acids are often species-specific, i.e., the set of amino acids that are essential for a particular organism is not necessarily the same for other organisms." Since this video was focused on general biology, I kept it general. I do apologize for the confusion. I will try to clarify this point a bit better in another version of this video. Thank you for bringing this up! 🙌
@@JoaosLabokay yes I get that point, I was actually aware of the facts that essential and non essential amino acids can be species specific, thank you for the explanation helped to clear up things better!