Hello, I'm a Geneticist. I have learned Genetics for so many years but non of my teachers explained the minute differences this clearly and it was hard for me to find the clear difference in my college time. Thanks for uploading this video. This is really basic for a geneticist to further move deep into the topics. I will recommend your video for my juniors. REGARDS, suhasini M.P
This guy is just awesome. He knows how to explain the material and in what order. I now read my textbook to get a general Idea then hop on here to fill in my questions.
Dang. Im only 7 minutes in and so far you have explained things really well. Some teachers dont work for everybody, but I think I have found the teacher that works for me. You're so easy to listen to and explain things thoroughly, thanks for putting out great content!
U guys are soo good. Biology textbooks dont even bother covering these concepts and they jump right to the main content. Now i can actually understand what I'm studying. Lol.
I'm an engineer entering a Bioinformatics and Genomics degree, and your videos are the best content I've seen so far on these subjects. Some of these concepts are so hard to find a good straight forward explanation on, and textbooks still have a long way to go to make the information practical. I seriously can't thank you enough, this is going to effect my academics and my career substantially. I'll certainly be recommending these videos, thank you SO much!
15 minutes worth sparing....Sir ur just so excellent... none of my words can express how excellent is your teaching skill... hats off to u... u just cleared all the ups and downs of my mind about genes..ty so much with love from 🇮🇳🇮🇳
This was amazing..except one thing I want to make sure I'm right on..you mention the dominant allele is expressed bc it inhibits the recessive. Isn't it actually that the dominant creates a functional protein while the recessive allele doesn't? And the dominant allele is only dominant because it functions in comparison to the non-functioning protein? So rather than inhibition, it's simply functionality
+Eva Gershovich . Hi friend, Yes you are right. dominant here is the organism require only one dose of such proteins to express its character. while for the recessive it requires double dose of such proteins is required to express its character. This is more appropriate. I think this will be helpful to you.
You're great. In spite of the fact that English is not my native language and I can be easily distracted during lessons, I can clearly understand the topics thanks to your lectures. As a psychology student, I don't take genetic lessons, I'm here because of my own curiosity. Your lectures encouraged me to continue learning more about genetics. Thank you so much.
who is watching this on Christmas day 2019, this guy lecture is awesome, simple to understand, I now fully comprehend what a gene, allele, and locus is. thank you and Merry Xmas
Hi, I have a question. Apparently a single locus on ONE chromosome has TWO alleles! But there are also two alleles in the two homologous chromosomes? Very confusing. Thank you!
Alright man. Look. Just give it up. Get a number 1, all over. Rock the Jason Statham look. This isn't fooling anybody. You'll feel much better about yourself when you do.
honestly, after watching many videos and attending lectures I don't get the base but now I'm fully satisfied ya really know how to deliver a lecture and explain in a better and basic also in an elegant way really this was so basic and clear.
wow, your explanation is so straightforward and I can't thank you enough for having helped me understand these basic terms in genetics which haven't been properly defined and distinguished in the text books. Please keep it up!
Sir, please make a video of multiple alleles diagrammatic representation in such a way. As you said, Allele stays in pair that is only 2 strands of homologous chromosomes (1from father and another from mother is possible). So how do the other strand of chromosome( non-sister chromatids) be possible in such case? I'm really confuse now. But your deep explanation has cleared my concept about the differences between Gene and alleles in an excellent way. TQ 🙏
thankyou , my lecturer suggest to watch this video in order for more understanding about the diff between Locus , genes & alleles , amazingly ur explanation was very good . Waiting for another greats videos from AK lectures :)
I've been trying to understand genes, alleles and locus from hundreds of sources. But no one could make me understand these concepts like you did❤️❤️❤️
I never learned any Genetics in School. But I would like to know , how can Genes be differentiated from this parts in the DNA with no genetic information? SInce the whole DNA is made out of the same components, (gens and the "Inbetween spaces) how do we know were the Gene starts and were it end? And: the loci of the Genes are the same for everybody, but since the "Inbetween spaces" have different sizes in every human, will that not mean that the GEnes are also the in different spaces?
I have question (Maybe this is kinda late to ask since this vidio uploaded), but I hope you can notice Does locus lay all over the chromosome areas as you draw from the top to down, without any space at all, or just in some area like the space area as in the vidio. I am confuse about the white area that doens't coloured by the colour. Is that also locus? Or no?
hey ak lectures, I am a bit confused about alleles and genes, when you said that there is a total of 8 genes but total of 4 alleles. Isnt it though that for each gene there are two alleles? and thanks a lot for your videos :)
Thank you very much for this video. What he shows here is a single chromatid chromosome right? So chromosomes before the DNA-replication in interphase?
Thanks for another exciting yet confusing topic which you clarified in a way that nobody ever could. Do you have lectures on thalessemia? Kindly share the link. Thanks 😊