There is nothing that this man cannot teach....One must not need to know everything to tach other, one only needs the ability to make others understand what you know in the easiest way...this man does it all
you all prolly dont care but does anyone know of a tool to log back into an instagram account?? I somehow forgot my login password. I would appreciate any tips you can offer me
@@uthmanrashad775 anti-sense and strand is in relation to transcription, the anti-sense strand is the template that is the strand used to synthesize the rna and the sense strand is the non template. I don't know if this makes sense but yh
@@_sakura.. yh thx. I was thinking about semi-conservative replication and whether DNA polymerase moves from the 5’ to 3’ end (sense strand). I just got a bit confused
What i love about this channel is the range of topics you cover. Maths, biology, biochemistry, chemistry even personal finances. How can you be so smart man
Honestly you have the easiest voice to follow. I have listened to a lot of different chemistry and biology related tutorials on the internet and at uni. Yours are the most explanatory, straight to the point and easiest to understand. Thank you very much.
nat 1 year ago Honestly you have the easiest voice to follow. I have listened to a lot of different chemistry and biology related tutorials on the internet and at uni. Yours are the most explanatory, straight to the point and easiest to understand. Thank you very much. REPLY
@@dbuc4671 @dbuc4671 1 year ago nat 1 year ago Honestly you have the easiest voice to follow. I have listened to a lot of different chemistry and biology related tutorials on the internet and at uni. Yours are the most explanatory, straight to the point and easiest to understand. Thank you very much. REPLY
@@nish8399 2 days ago @dbuC @dbuc4671 1 year ago nat 1 year ago Honestly you have the easiest voice to follow. I have listened to a lot of different chemistry and biology related tutorials on the internet and at uni. Yours are the most explanatory, straight to the point and easiest to understand. Thank you very much. REPLY Reply
@@Anas-eg1cb @Anas-eg1cb 4 months ago @nish8399 2 days ago @dbuC @dbuc4671 1 year ago nat 1 year ago Honestly you have the easiest voice to follow. I have listened to a lot of different chemistry and biology related tutorials on the internet and at uni. Yours are the most explanatory, straight to the point and easiest to understand. Thank you very much. REPLY Reply
I can't even express with words how thankful I am because of your videos. I have been struggling with genetics since the beginning of this semester and you literally explain everything so smoothly and well!!! I understood everything in 20 min. I usually go to class and I get desperate because I don't get what the teacher is saying in her lectures. Thank you so much for all this videos !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
😅 you're really becoming a tiktok edit. I'm obsessed, you've helped me with two years of school work. Please make more videos relating to biochemistry 😊❤
This guy is too good, like I had to purse the video to compliment you first. I've been struggling with this particular topic but you broke everything down to the simplest form for me, I love your teaching. God bless you abundantly for me.
Preparing for a test today and I've being finding so difficult to accumulate all the activities going on in the replication properly and less confusing, and you just made that very possible. Thank you, I'm very grateful ♥️
MAY ALLAH BLESS YOU BESTIE!! thank you soo much for your amazing work, it was so easy to understand and I got it quickly! Also the quiz/ exercise in the end helped alot. 😭💜
you have so much value to so many people. you are making your mark on the world by making education possible for so many of us. These videos are a treasure and you are an icon in education. Thank you, really.
I love u so much sir & I say that from the bottom of my heart. U have really helped me academically in so many ways & I so much thank u for the effort u put in explaining these concepts. A lot of these university lecturers don’t teach as good as you sir. Much love from Nigeria ❤
I really can not express how grateful i am for your lessons🥺whenever there's something i don't understand i know that i got you!! Thank you so much sir, you really are a blessing in our lives
generally, the video is useful to understand what is replication and why it is necessary. But something doesn't seem correct for example in the addition of nucleotides to lagging strand, or primers. pls correct me if i'm wrong.
I praise your hard work Sir..do you I was stuck in one topic of DNA replication which is of lagging strand. I tried to get online answers but I couldn't find any satisfactory answer but now your video has provided me the solution ....I must say your video is very helpful for me..thank you soooo much 🙏🏼 A Huge Respect From An Indian Student..🇮🇳
It is odd that you talk about DNA polymerase III and DNA polymerase I. Those are used in bacteria, not in eukaryotes. Eukaryotes use mainly DNA polymerase delta and DNA polymerase epsilon. In your video on translation, you talked about translation in eukaryotic cells, without saying so. For example, you said that the proteins leave the ribosome and go to the Golgi bodies ... eukaryotes have Golgi bodies, prokaryotes do not. You don't mention in this video that you changed from talking about eukaryotes specifically to talking about bacteria specifically, so most people probably think you are still talking about eukaryotes.
Great video, I love your voice, it´s so easy to understand and follow (i´m not primarly english speaker) . And the list you showed in the upper right side it´s just the abstract I need to write down like a flash card. Thank you so much, I really appreciate it!
You do such a good job explaining. I'm not sure why people are giving you a thumbs down. Every time I have a question I come on your page and leaving fully understanding. I wish you could be my tutor. Would you be interested in tutoring me over Zoom for A and P.
Thank you so much, for this video , I sat in class for 2hrs and didn't understand anything about DNA Replication.... I listened to this video for 10 mins , I now got the concept
i love you!!! my teacher: 45mins explaining me: i didn't get a fcking shit the organic chemistrry tutor: explaining for 10min me: so that's how it is! it'ss super easy
Thank you so much your videos are making everything clearer 💚I'm from Algeria but I study in Portugal so I'm not a native speaker and I've been here for 1 year , I still have difficulties in understanding my teachers' explanations therefore your videos are so helpful for me , 💚 keep uploading 💚all love and respect for you💚
I've had to have watched my professor's videos at least 5 times and it still flew over my head- one watch with this video and it's crystal clear. Thanks.
VERY VERY HELPFUL. even someone as dumb as me understands now. thank you sir you have helped me not only in bio but in algebra, precalc, calc, chem, and physics
Thank you so much. I just learned this in class before spring break, we went over it all so fast I got confused, plus all the time from spring break left me with some unknown info. This helped a lot
Hi, I have some questions : 1) Are the new nucleotides being added on the leading strand also okazaki fragments? 2) Is addition of primer necessary even if we have a strand that runs from 5' to 3'? 3) My textbook says that okazaki fragments are primers, is that true?
Hi, this is a late response but hope this helps. 1. No they are not. Okazaki fragments refers only to the fragments on the LAGGING strand and are not found on the leading strand. This is due to the fact that only one rna primer is set on the leading strand and DNA synthesis is continuous. The lagging will need tons of rna primers and only does DNA synthesis in short bits, hence the fragments (which will later be connected). 2. Yes, but only one if you mean the strand that is being synthesized. 3. Okazaki fragments are not primers. Okazaki fragments are the fragments of dna synthesis made by the lagging strand, however each individual Okazaki fragments will have one primer (which will later be removed and all the fragments will be combined to make a whole segment of DNA). - hope this helps. Confused me too when I was in college.
I was confused about all these stuff, the complex terminology was killing me until I find your video. You are a godsent. Thanks for making such brilliant videos! By far, the best in business.
Thanks for the video! I can't begin to explain how complicated the process is in my book. I have an exam tomorrow and you just saved me again. Thanks for everything!
You do a really amazing job of introducing the information in a manner that is easily comprehensible. Taking a semi-difficult topic such as DNA replication and making it seem simple is a very underrated skill and you perform it magnificently. Thanks for the video, it was extremely helpful!
Idk where you are but if you teach still more in the view of 'NEET ' apirants i swear that you easily get another 1 m subscribers just in a month [any support for this comment]