Thank you. THANK YOU for posting this video in the first place. Once, I was absolutely fucking confused with the whole Michaelis-Menten Equation thingy that only a few of my peers got it. But now, after watching this video, I'm now enlightened. Thank you!
Please never stop uploading, u r literally a saviour, when i am about to leave youtube bcz of not being able to understand the topic, u r the one who protects my emotions for that topic, now u have, i swear become one of my top most priorities in case of lectures Thankyou so much 😭😭
Great Michaelis-Menten graph explanation also a good reminder of enzymology. Good to know in the upcoming one we'll be talking about the 3 types of enzyme inhibition which also drives students nuts 😅 but of course no more, thanks to your comprehensive lectures.
So basically if there is a lot of Km meaning a lot of substrate the enzymes will have lower (less affinity) because there are too many substrates and enzymes are very specific?
No!!! Km measures enzyme affinity for a substrate, remember Km is half Vmax. Meaning if an enzyme has high Km, it means an enzyme requires high concretration of a substrate to reach Vmax. The increase in substrate has no effect on Vmax, as the Vmax remains the same
You are the best and I do mean the BEST! The way you explain things just sticks. You are literally my number 1 resource for leaning new material! Thank you so much!
OMG! THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR ALL OF THESE VIDEOS! YOU ARE TRULY HELPING ME WITH UNDERSTANDING ALL OF THESE!! IM ALMOST GIVE UP ON BIOCHEM THANK YOU SO MUCH!!
Whenever I get sick and tired of studying for the medical school entrance exam, I watch your videos. They help me regain my motivation to keep studying XD Thank you so much! Your knowledge inspires me a lot. I wish I could be like you in the future. (From South Korea)
Why do enzymes or protein get saturated? Saturation: What Does That Mean? Does that imply fatigue? Is it comparable to a man who works extremely hard all day being exhausted (saturated) and losing all energy? please shed some light on this comment
Saturation means that all the available receptors are busy, and therefore can’t bind more substrate (think of it as a call center where all the customer service representative are busy with other clients, i.e. saturated).
Happy to hear that! I wish you all the success in the world! Make sure to watch My MCAT Playlists: 🚗 Organic Chemistry: ru-vid.com/group/PLYcLrRDaR8_f_-vdA2r_z4Ie-CFAPV2sK 🔥 General Chemistry: ru-vid.com/group/PLYcLrRDaR8_e4MrgwcOjbt3mS4nUbSs8w 🧪 Biochemistry: ru-vid.com/group/PLYcLrRDaR8_c2LBpF_OYvwijOok7ae96N 🧬 Biology: ru-vid.com/group/PLYcLrRDaR8_f10hjfgWdBzaZ9PuIut-y7 🚗 Physics: ru-vid.com/group/PLYcLrRDaR8_cnnwn5YP6EAfXoAYknzVI3&si=vsCtVfJHk5Upum1F ⁉️ MCAT Questions: ru-vid.com/group/PLYcLrRDaR8_fOmzTb2f8L96D_LkLhPw0X