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mRNA Translation (Advanced) 

DNA Learning Center
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The job of the mRNA is to carry the gene's message from the DNA out of the nucleus to a ribosome for production of the particular protein that this gene codes for.
Originally created for DNA Interactive ( www.dnai.org ).
TRANSCRIPT: The job of this mRNA is to carry the genes message from the DNA out of the nuceus to a ribosome for production of the particular protein that this gene codes for. There can be several million ribosomes in a typical eukaryotic cell these complex catalytic machines use the mrna copy of the genetic information to assemble amino acid building blokes into the three dimensional proteins that are essential for life. Lets see how it works. The ribosome is composed of one large and one small sub-unit that assemble around the messenger RNA, which then passes through the ribosome like a computer tape. The amino acid building blocks (that's the small glowing red molecules) are carried into the ribosome attached to specific transfer RNAs. That's the larger green molecules also referred to as tRNA. The small sub-unit of the ribosome positions the mRNA so that it can be read in groups of three letters known as a codon. Each codon on the mRNA matches a corresponding anti-codon on the base of a transfer RNA molecule.The larger sub-unit of the ribosome removes each amino acid and join it onto the growing protein chain. As the mRNA is ratcheted through the ribosome, the mRNA sequence is translated into an amino acid sequence. There are three locations inside the ribosome, designated the A-site, the P-site and the E-site. The addition of each amino acid is a three step cycle: First, the tRNA enters the ribosome at the A-site and is tested for a codon/anti-codon match with the mRNA. Next, provided there is a correct match, the tRNA is shifted to the P-site and the amino acid it carries is added to the end of the amino acid chain. The mRNA is also ratcheted on three nucleotides or one codon. Thirdly, the spent tRNA is moved to the E-site and then ejected from the ribosome to be recycled. As the protein synthesis proceeds, the finished chain emerges from the ribosome. It folds up into a precise shape, determined by the exact order of amino acids. Thus the Central Dogma explains how the four letter DNA code is - quite literally - turned into flesh and blood.

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27 авг 2024

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Комментарии : 742   
@DNALearningCenter
@DNALearningCenter 2 года назад
Check out other DNALC videos and animations: dnalc.cshl.edu/resources/animations/ Visit us in Cold Spring Harbor, Brooklyn, or Sleepy Hollow! 🧬Field trips dnalc.cshl.edu/programs/fieldtrips/index.html 🧬 Summer camps (virtual also available!) summercamps.dnalc.org
@nick2718281828
@nick2718281828 12 лет назад
In a word, yes. There is also a helper molecule called EF-Tu that makes sure that the wrong matches bounce away when they happen to come to the A site, and makes sure the right matches stay in and don't just bounce out. The principle behind this is thermodynamics: everything is happening randomly, but only one road leads to Rome.
@cringeydramaaccount8390
@cringeydramaaccount8390 3 года назад
This video has caused me to go into an existential crisis. How tf are my teeny tiny cells SO MUCH SMARTER THAN ME.
@ChiDraconis
@ChiDraconis 3 года назад
Space Lizards: Wow signal just detected from Alpha Centauri Covid-19 is only a distraction for the PCR Tent Clowns *0.0004 is not a Pandemic it is Panning for gold*
@WTF_BBQ
@WTF_BBQ 3 года назад
Aliens........
@freedomthrufaith
@freedomthrufaith 3 года назад
Ask Billy Goats
@lynb4043
@lynb4043 3 года назад
One explanation: God
@cringeydramaaccount8390
@cringeydramaaccount8390 3 года назад
@@lynb4043 Whatever floats your boat.
@chrisfix
@chrisfix 12 лет назад
Thanks for the info!!! Helped me understand how translation works!!!
@henryelicker2403
@henryelicker2403 3 года назад
WOAH It's ChrisFix! *Never* would have thought to see you here! That's quite awesome really. Thanks for being so helpful with car information by the way.
@RosieRoserules
@RosieRoserules 3 года назад
Interesting comment. Translated. I was always curious why the Bible story said ENOCH WAS TRANSLATED. also, God said Enoch was the " great artificer" who surprised God w his intellect. ( just talking about the book), It finally dawned on me that perhaps Enoch invented artificial intelligence way back when and that was what impressed God in this book and that was what he meant when he said he said Enoch was the great artificer. ai may be ancient, would explain simulations. Of Course we also have stories in the fifteen hundreds of Simon Magus who made an automobot. Or Android and Thomas Aquinas destroyed it. Your translated comment triggered this, lol
@SamFBM
@SamFBM 3 года назад
ayee chris
@ongatvlog4050
@ongatvlog4050 2 года назад
@Mgbraixen 0
@littlereptilian7580
@littlereptilian7580 2 года назад
Based chris
@Jmjholden
@Jmjholden 4 года назад
"Like a computer tape" Oh ok
@rosscwilson
@rosscwilson 3 года назад
Right? Computer tape was already 50 years old in the early 2000s, when this video was produced. It *is* a decent analogy, but it doesn't really work if nobody in the audience understands the comparison. Then again, nobody really knows what a "powerhouse" is anymore and that hasn't stopped biology teachers keen on spreading the news about mitochondria.
@annastasialea6642
@annastasialea6642 3 года назад
Sounds like we are very high tech robots
@car103d
@car103d 3 года назад
DAT is still used for archives
@melyndalopez272
@melyndalopez272 3 года назад
Hahahaha
@ZenTradeGame
@ZenTradeGame 3 года назад
Omg I 😂 so hard to this comment! Thank you !
@NrityaSankalpa
@NrityaSankalpa 3 года назад
WOW!!! I wish I had these videos 25 years ago when I was studying! we studied from black and white text books with not so great diagrams.
@weylin6
@weylin6 8 лет назад
This is really just good for sparking interest in genetics, I'm sure if this was truly 'advanced' I'd be leaving this video with a completely blown mind. I have no idea what these students are talking about below me, about the subunits and release factors, as the only videos that would probably explain those things are painfully dull 2 hour long lectures in 240p resolution.
@TurdFurgeson571
@TurdFurgeson571 5 лет назад
It may spark an interest in genetics, but there would be no need to label the video as "advanced" if that is the intent. I'd bet it would be far better at grabbing the audience you describe if it had a title something like "basics" or "digging a little deeper" or something like that.
@inamib.9786
@inamib.9786 5 лет назад
I thought “advanced” meant we would see all the factors in the same process. The factors functions aren’t complicated, most of them just provide energy to help the molecules move. Having them named helps me retain them better while studying but it’s not super complex stuff
@tommysmyth1210
@tommysmyth1210 4 года назад
This video is as advanced as 10th grade biology goes
@nathangray-bain1340
@nathangray-bain1340 2 года назад
It's grade 12 / first year uni level bio i think. First year uni goes into a little more depth of course. This is kind of a brief overview.
@melissarainchild
@melissarainchild 6 лет назад
Thank you. And indeed, this is as advanced as it gets (without getting into the molecular nitty-gritty)...worth noting is that the translation begins at the 5' side of the mRNA...just to be complete :)
@FlashGamer1Fable
@FlashGamer1Fable 10 лет назад
I thought this was supposed to be advanced... No discussion on initiation or elongation factors, nothing about release factors, nothing about wobble, aninoacyl-trna synthetase, the polarity of the tRNA, 30s 50s ribosomes subunits...
@user-sz5mk1nd8p
@user-sz5mk1nd8p 9 лет назад
FlashGamer1Fable !!!
@Gangularis
@Gangularis 9 лет назад
Chill out, it's only three minutes long. They go in to that in other videos.
@nygeek6471
@nygeek6471 8 лет назад
+FlashGamer1Fable In a 3 minute video, are you trolling?
@brycelynch2138
@brycelynch2138 8 лет назад
+nygeek64 It's a RU-vid comment.
@brandonkelley6500
@brandonkelley6500 6 лет назад
I'm pretty sure this was ripped from PBS secret life of DNA. Animation is almost the same and the script is almost the same
@rommelb.8070
@rommelb.8070 2 года назад
This is very scary experiment on mankind
@timevergreen3619
@timevergreen3619 Месяц назад
​@@Ankit42aa it's human experimentation
@JJT03-l2v
@JJT03-l2v 4 года назад
This is actually a good visual representation of the whole thing to help you digest the topic. This is not to spoon feed you with everything. If you want detailed info, read a book.
@kbellijelli
@kbellijelli 10 лет назад
The DNA learning center that this channel is representing is for middle and high school students. It's listed as advanced because it's geared towards the more advanced of the students that attend classes there, not in general.
@eVill420
@eVill420 Год назад
this is additional material in my university entrance course
@rhyfelwrDuw
@rhyfelwrDuw 3 года назад
"For we are fearfully and wonderfully made"
@shelliearchibald4008
@shelliearchibald4008 10 лет назад
Most people don't know that, originally, RNA was the preferred form of genetic material. Evolution switched to DNA because it was less prone to base mutations and hydrolysis; RNA already existed as the "go-between" between DNA and polypeptides. The process is ridiculously unfathomable, but all the more wonderful for it :)
@oliviamohning7095
@oliviamohning7095 6 лет назад
Shellie Archibald that's so cool! Thanks for sharing :)
@MonteVanNortwick
@MonteVanNortwick 11 месяцев назад
You are assuming RNA first. Where's your hard evidence?
@seanojha5784
@seanojha5784 6 лет назад
Was not prepared for the snarkiness of people saying "not advanced enough" lmao
@spectroxis6418
@spectroxis6418 5 лет назад
Were AP Students....
@realixt872
@realixt872 4 года назад
@@spectroxis6418 if so, why have you used were instead of we're
@marinarosabarbosa
@marinarosabarbosa 3 года назад
@@realixt872 I thought he meant "they were AP students" lol
@ChiDraconis
@ChiDraconis 3 года назад
@@marinarosabarbosa *Were* Until they got the bill for 400 page texts Where is the *B117* → That is the Russian Ducks invade Nederland's Minks are history already ~ this animation is slowed about 1 Million-x for humans ~ Badges? We ain't got no badges! We don't need no badges! I don't have to show you any stinking badges! Stores are packed, people are traveling all over the country coming to visit..... Downtown Nashville ! - 0.0004 ain't no Pandemic
@kebrongurara1612
@kebrongurara1612 3 года назад
@@ChiDraconis What the fuck?
@Artbyevelyn
@Artbyevelyn 3 года назад
I’m here because this was uploaded 10 years ago and today we in a pandemic COVID-19 Vaccine using this technology. Not sure what to think of about this.
@ChiDraconis
@ChiDraconis 3 года назад
Quantum Lewis dot notation then come back to this
@Artbyevelyn
@Artbyevelyn 3 года назад
@@ChiDraconis where focus flows energy goes
@ChiDraconis
@ChiDraconis 3 года назад
@@microska2656 To speak for others there must be a Conspiracy Conspiracy Theories are often negative; - More than 1 in 3 Americans believe that the Chinese Bat Lady engineered the coronavirus as a weapon yet if I try to look into that Baseball Bats are the only bat that I am likely to find ~ As a painter you may be interested in Quantum chromodynamics
@fatitankeris6327
@fatitankeris6327 3 года назад
If the concern is about engaging with DNA, then don't be worried; It works without the such engagement. It simply does what the weakened virus versions would do, but without the infector as a whole, but with a part of it, responsible for creating virus spikes and/or triggering the immune system to create antibodies, without the immune system having to fight in a COVID-19. Don't take my word for it though, I'm not very qualified in this area. I just have read the topic a bit.
@killsalot78
@killsalot78 3 года назад
LOL "this technology", its anatomy, its the basic function of life. Ribosomes just makes things, they're little machines. Every virus ever uses them to make more viruses. The covid vaccine is just a small portion of the virial DNA, and only encodes for the proteins that coalesce and form the outer spike of the virus. Which then causes an immune system reaction and anti-bodies to generate. Its not rocket appliances
@Oogieblake
@Oogieblake 7 лет назад
first trna actually attaches to the P site, then after that they all correspond and connect to the A site, going along the chain from A to P to E
@MoreKevinLiang
@MoreKevinLiang 11 лет назад
This is a more basic version, definitely. The Large prokaryotic subunit is 50S (Svedberg Units, or sedimentation rate). It has 5SRNA (120 nucleotides) 23S RNA (2900 nucleotides) and 34 proteins. Small subunit is 30S with 16SRNA -1540 nucleotides and 21 proteins. 16S is the site of antibiotic action. Eurkaryotic is 60S and 40S. The steps are initiation, propagation and elongation, and wow I just realized that this video missed so much information.
@truthisbeautiful7492
@truthisbeautiful7492 4 месяца назад
What builds the proteins that make up the ribosomes? And why are ribosomes different in the three domains of life?
@oreokarail
@oreokarail 4 дня назад
As someone who has done programming, I can say that the process shown here is quite similar to it. RNA = script ribosome = interpreter protein = output
@judith8161
@judith8161 2 года назад
Holy kittens, I can't believe I have this going on in my cells basically all the time. It looks like a perfectly choreographed ballet. I've been searching for this because I want to be able to explain how the mRNA vaccines work to people who still don't understand why I'm so enthusiastic about this new development in the history of vaccines, but now I'm so fascinated that I need to dig deeper.
@annsmahboob3495
@annsmahboob3495 4 года назад
10 years later and I am still waiting for the advanced bit.
@DarkAddictionx
@DarkAddictionx 3 года назад
I watched this video to learn this for my microbiology class. Now 2 years later, this is happening right now inside my body after my vaccine :)
@wouldntyouwantotoknow2602
@wouldntyouwantotoknow2602 3 года назад
Good luck see how you are in a couple years
@DarkAddictionx
@DarkAddictionx 3 года назад
@@wouldntyouwantotoknow2602 the fact that you say this is, already thinking negative and bad things for someone is sad. Hope you make it :)
@chris_maejor
@chris_maejor 3 года назад
U fell for the trap :( this is sad
@victorriverieulx2297
@victorriverieulx2297 3 года назад
@@chris_maejor Which trap?
@chris_maejor
@chris_maejor 3 года назад
@@victorriverieulx2297 taking the shot...
@BryanChance
@BryanChance 3 года назад
Amazing. This is no accident or random actions. It's by intelligent design. :-)
@ghu3932
@ghu3932 3 года назад
God is great!!
@JN-zr4ts
@JN-zr4ts 3 года назад
who made the designer?
@fatitankeris6327
@fatitankeris6327 3 года назад
@@JN-zr4ts Those are things that aren't usually answered, or even discussed. If there is any creator like God, then I believe he started the universe, or something where our universe is at, because such things as evolution, forming of complex stable structures is possible, and at studying that we probably are quite advanced and correct. Otherwise, it's hard to tell to a human that something can appear not as expected by our human comprehension.
@Ambigulous
@Ambigulous Год назад
What a lazy way out.
@pedroadib5813
@pedroadib5813 9 лет назад
i need to know how deep did they do to the realism on this animations.
@cyruslagranda9717
@cyruslagranda9717 3 года назад
pick any episode of the Simpsons to find out...
@hitchhikerwaffle
@hitchhikerwaffle 11 лет назад
This is a very basic animation over translation. It only simply mentions eukaryotic cells. It does not show how the Translation begins with EIF's which is attracted to the cap at the 5 prime end. This then attracts a methianine tRNA which will attract a 40s SSU ribosome bottom followed by the 60s LSU top of the ribosome. This is just the initiation of translation of eukaryotic cells.
@jakovpralas5696
@jakovpralas5696 3 года назад
Amazing creation of our God Almighty! There is absolutely no way that such specific things in our body were made my accident/out of nowhere....Praise the Lord!
@user-gt9te2fk2o
@user-gt9te2fk2o 3 года назад
Amen!
@responsibleparty
@responsibleparty 3 года назад
Yes, praise Allah!
@jakovpralas5696
@jakovpralas5696 3 года назад
@@responsibleparty Allah is not called "The Lord" Jesus is. 😄
@responsibleparty
@responsibleparty 3 года назад
@@jakovpralas5696 So you say. Things can get a little wonky when you don't live with an evidence-based mindset.
@gata958e
@gata958e 3 года назад
Praise, Zeus
@etienne7774
@etienne7774 3 года назад
To God be the glory.
@parvizkarbasi4792
@parvizkarbasi4792 3 года назад
great video, but it would have been nice if you talked more about the P,A,E sites as well as the different enzymes used in translation. also Translation first starts on the P site when Trna transfers the metiyonin aminoacid over to the AUG codon located on the P site to start translation. overall Great video thank you
@Kal-EL_Volta
@Kal-EL_Volta Год назад
Does dna only code for protein? Is everything that makes us work just because dna coded for a specicfic protein? How do ribosomes know what to do?
@maxwellsimon4538
@maxwellsimon4538 Год назад
@@Kal-EL_Volta Yes, most of our bodies vital functions occur due to proteins, which make structures and molecular machines, or enzymes, which catalyze reactions. None of these parts really "know" what to do, but basically, the ribosome forms around a "start" sequence on the mRNA, and then waits for a tRNA molecule with the proper matching sequence on it to click into place. Whenever matching sets of RNA letters come together, A-U, and G-C, a small amount of energy is released and this energy drives forward the ribosome's action. Then another tRNA comes into place on the next available site, and the matching of 3 base pairs again provides enough energy to drive to the next step, which is fusing the two amino acids, after which the first tRNA is ejected. Basically, the video isn't showing all the wrong tRNA pieces coming in and going out, unable to provide the necessary energy, and only shows the correct pieces going in and driving the reaction
@josealbertosalazarga
@josealbertosalazarga 3 года назад
Absolutly: Inteligent Design !!!
@vincentlau6325
@vincentlau6325 4 года назад
This process right here is hard af to describe with words and this is just the "basics of basics" holy shit lol
@deltawolf
@deltawolf 10 лет назад
Good video but not "advanced" enough. Didn't mention Elongation factors or proof reading CCA arm, editing site, active site etc. If the latter isn't a part of the translation itself, EF's are. The EF's that bring the tRNA to the ribosome for instance. Or am I wrong?
@FlashGamer1Fable
@FlashGamer1Fable 10 лет назад
Initiation factors bind to the 5' cap of the mRNA and guide it into the small ribosomal subunit. And they hold it in place while the small subunit scans for the start 5'AUG3' codon. Then a tRNA carrying an elongation factor with an anti codon 3'UAC5' carrying a methionine comes and binds to the mRNA, the large subunit then joins the complex and begins the process
@ralphmalph6824
@ralphmalph6824 3 года назад
This is a marketing video intended to sell this misguided intellectualism to the general self despising public.
@yuekangzhang4520
@yuekangzhang4520 Год назад
You're right. For eukaryotes, eEF1A brings charged tRNA to A/T site. If base pairing is successful, eEF1A would hydrolyze its GTP, dissociate, and leave the A/T tRNA in the A site. Then after peptide bond formation and 40S head rotation, eEF2 would come and help with translocation. The overall process is similar for prokaryotes, but instead of having eEF1A and eEF2 they use EF-TU and EF-G. On top of that there are initiation factors, most importantly eIF2, eIF3, eIF4E and eIF4G and release factors (eRF1 and eRF3), as well as other proteins that either promote ribosome re-initiation, recycling or hibernation.
@claudiaspinner2784
@claudiaspinner2784 10 лет назад
Great vids. Would be helpful if there was some kind of numbering attached to help new viewers sort out which to view first and in which sequence.
@ihasashark
@ihasashark 11 лет назад
EXACTLY! -___- or go read the textbook. This actually helps with the basic understanding. You can fill in the rest by READING.
@curlytana01
@curlytana01 11 лет назад
this is crazy this going on right now INSIDE me!
@spotlightman1234
@spotlightman1234 12 лет назад
@LughGarrick The thing is that on such small scales like this we're talking about, molecules move relatively very fast. This animation being showed is slowed way down so you can see what is going on. In reality ribosomes can make hundreds of proteins a second.
@realityprogrammer1218
@realityprogrammer1218 8 лет назад
According to Francis Crick, "Biologists must constantly keep in mind that what they see was not designed, but rather evolved" You can see why he said that. If we once allow ourselves to be impartial, we would intuitively recognize the hallmark of design in the magnificent gene expression process. Humans use CAM (computer aided manufacturing) systems to turn information into real objects. The ribosome likewise, is the 3D print head that turns digital information into flesh and blood. Very well done indeed.
@theultimatereductionist7592
@theultimatereductionist7592 6 лет назад
+reality programmer It's amazing that braindead fucks like christurds find it "amazing" that others might have different opinions from them about untestable unquantifiable imagaring things such as other realms.
@theultimatereductionist7592
@theultimatereductionist7592 6 лет назад
Well said, Mass Extinction!
@kventinho
@kventinho 11 лет назад
It's not about being humble or not, it's a misleading title for a college student seeking extra info like me. I was expecting visual representation of say, EF mechanisms or IF1,2,3. So yeah, sorry but this should not be labelled as advanced.
@Osama84ca
@Osama84ca 11 лет назад
wow, I wish I knew how cool bio is, I would have been way more interested in school!
@bingusmode5498
@bingusmode5498 Год назад
Thank you so so SOSOSOSOSO much for having a transcript.
@thexxmaster
@thexxmaster 3 года назад
reading this after having learnt programming is mind blowing.
@jungle1776
@jungle1776 3 года назад
Please explain
@thexxmaster
@thexxmaster 3 года назад
@@jungle1776 the DNA acting like code/parameter string and the ribosome acting like a interpreter. So many parallels to how programming works.
@jungle1776
@jungle1776 3 года назад
@@thexxmaster so you are saying they are trying to program is? I'm just trying to understand. I don't know coding.
@thexxmaster
@thexxmaster 3 года назад
@@jungle1776 yeah. So programming is the process of creating code which creates an output, which is a computer program. The DNA acts like the code, with it defining the output: a protein. Software code is just a text. That text must be 'read' by something like an interpreter, that reads the text like a recipe and builds the software program. DNA follows the same process: the amenio acids are like words in the recipe, and the recipe is read to build a protein. The interpreter here is the ribosome. A wikipedia search on computer compilers might be nice further reading.
@truth.betold.
@truth.betold. 2 года назад
Now I need to find a comparison vid between the two
@footfault1941
@footfault1941 4 года назад
A request for a technical issue: use of occasional slow motion images. Too hectic activity is to pay attention to. It'd be very nice if those processes were shown at slower speed for a short while to have a clearer look at each elements. Anything else, perfect!
@MegaBadboy6969
@MegaBadboy6969 3 года назад
mRNA is basically RFID chip that's why you need four doses of nanotechnology
@danieljust295
@danieljust295 3 года назад
Exactly, how do we know if mRNA in vaccines will not produce protein RFID ?
@imjohnfreeman
@imjohnfreeman 2 года назад
@@danieljust295 'protein RFID'? wtf is a 'protein RFID'? do you know what RFID is?
@danieljust295
@danieljust295 2 года назад
Douglis Do you know what is self-assembly nanotechnology ? Do you understand that you can power up any circuit remotely via radio waves if a circuit comprises of an antenna ? Now think, our body contain iron molecules and these molecules can be assembled using proteins into electric circuits. I’m not saying this is how it is but rather that such technology exists already.
@Wandelaarke
@Wandelaarke 13 лет назад
they forgot to mention precursor RNA is made first... which then changes to functional RNA by cutting out the intrones (RNA-splicing) anyway, this video is wicked :D
@wellplayednessy
@wellplayednessy 12 лет назад
This is absolutely brilliant! Perfect for my AP Bio class! Thank you!
@veritasdesigns5067
@veritasdesigns5067 2 года назад
You remember that when you get sick, and your CD8 stops working. Remember when you wanna silence those who disagree with the jabs.
@talori5417
@talori5417 2 года назад
Wow! Our bodies really are technological.
@chrisao1987
@chrisao1987 3 года назад
Our bodies are amazing.
@MohrRacing2
@MohrRacing2 3 года назад
Now I know how the vaccine works
@TheOrene
@TheOrene Год назад
“Turned into flesh and blood” god that’s chilling to think about, but really cool too
@mtmorgan90
@mtmorgan90 12 лет назад
@eliastop It is called ribosomal RNA and contains structures and enzymes necessary for the synthesis of proteins. I hope that helps a little :)
@jkamikazi93
@jkamikazi93 9 лет назад
This is just amazing/mind-blowing/genius! aghh life is so complex... the biological processes that occur in living systems are highly complex and ordered. However these reactions are characterized on the basis of simple laws and principles. Whether divinely orchestrated, determined via evolution or both (which i believe)! there is no argument that this is genius.
@theultimatereductionist7592
@theultimatereductionist7592 6 лет назад
Differential equations cause all this. And no, I do NOT believe in sentient gods. And evolution is a confirmed fact.
@rodrigomoreno11
@rodrigomoreno11 14 лет назад
im working now with 5S rRNA the small RNA in the Large subunit in Leishmania major :) I used this video to show te ribosome to my friends. So they can got and idea about my work :D.
@charleyjr.iriarte7428
@charleyjr.iriarte7428 9 лет назад
Thank you for the teaching of mRNA translation. Bless you.
@SummerFalooda
@SummerFalooda 11 лет назад
The codons (on the template- such as AGCT) tell which anti-codon is required (anticodon is present on the tRNA, and is reverse of the codon- in this case it would be TCGA). As the template moves along in the RNA, different tRNA's enter into the ribososme through the A site, when the tRNA has the required anti-codon, it moves into the P site where the (protein is being made) and releases its amino acid to join the chain (that is the protein). After releasing the amino acid, the tRNA exits...
@m0istl0la97
@m0istl0la97 Год назад
U mean AGCU? T is not present in mRNA or tRNA
@robertpreisser3547
@robertpreisser3547 3 года назад
The “central dogma” mentioned at the end of this video is actually false. DNA does NOT contain all of the instructions necessary for life to develop. Building proteins is only a (very small) part of the story. Developmental pathways cause different cells to express different genes. Some of those gene regulatory networks reside in the DNA, but a lot of the control and signaling mechanisms do not. Simply building proteins does not include the necessary instructions that tell each individual cell which genes to turn on, which to turn off, as each cell differentiates and specializes (e.g., becomes nerve or neuron or muscle or bone cells). THAT information actually resides in information external to DNA. And there is other heritable information that does not reside in DNA at all. There are many sources of heritable information that are not found in the DNA, and scientists are just now beginning to learn about some of those (e.g., the “sugar code” on cell membranes that has been estimated as containing even more theoretical information storage capacity than DNA, or the heritable information contained in centrioles, etc.). While forming proteins is of course important, and different cell specializations require forming different proteins and in different amounts, the instructions for what type of proteins to make, in what quantities, and when, is actually not contained within the genome alone. And this video doesn’t even get into the information and complicated machinery required to perform post-transcriptional editing of the raw mRNA strand to edit out sections and splice unconnected stretches together into the final mRNA that contains the linear sequence of amino acids to form the final chosen protein. The level of information required for life to exist at all, let alone develop and diversify and specialize, etc. is actually much more complicated than simply building the right proteins.
@robertpreisser3547
@robertpreisser3547 3 года назад
@@metaphyziks7579 Great question! I would recommend checking out the Discovery Institute's Summer Seminars on Intelligent Design. Those seminars connect you with scientists working in the fields of biology, chemistry, cosmology, engineering, information theory, paleontology, etc. And the people who you attend with are often themselves scientists working in the field, whom you can connect with to stay current on the latest discoveries. I do read the literature myself as well, but it helps to have contacts working in the field to help provide context and help make sure I am interpreting the results correctly.
@robertpreisser3547
@robertpreisser3547 3 года назад
A great book that discusses all of the many challenges to all theories of abiogenesis is The Stairway To Life, by Robert Stadler and Change Tan. It is an excellent book that balances technical accuracy with readability by the general public who may not have advanced training in chemistry.
@John-jg2km
@John-jg2km 3 года назад
Bruh,
@ChiDraconis
@ChiDraconis 3 года назад
Edits not attempted due to clunky YT editor Oh yeah - Human ears evolved from fish-gills;
@robertpreisser3547
@robertpreisser3547 3 года назад
@@John-jg2km All I saw was “Bruh, “ and nothing else. Did you have a comment or question?
@ThanosSofroniou
@ThanosSofroniou 11 лет назад
Even my Molecular Biology textbook by Lizabeth Alison doesn't say ''advanced'' when spending an entire chapter just for translation. In fact it goes and suggests further material to read at the end of the chapter to understand it in more detail. An advanced material would be something that would explain the process in detail so that you can read and understand journal articles about the process. SO PLEASE NAME THIS ... (BASIC - OVERVIEW). Many of us are university students
@norman191000
@norman191000 12 лет назад
how do they know about this process in such a detail? What is the methodology of gathering motion data of such a small units?
@shinji906
@shinji906 3 года назад
they use a tiny camera placed into a cell and record it all.
@kebrongurara1612
@kebrongurara1612 3 года назад
They were observed using x-ray crystallography. A neat way to tell the shape of really small objects.
@313dlo
@313dlo 3 года назад
@@shinji906 a microscopic Go-Pro? Bodycam? Lol
@rickknight3823
@rickknight3823 3 года назад
No, they use reverse engineering of area 57 technology and shrink a submarine filled with biologists and a film crew and get injected Into the mRNA Vaccine jab site. Exit is usually by circumnavigation of the blood supply to be filtered into the kidneys where upon extraction - they are all reanimated with a reverse particle beam.
@313dlo
@313dlo 3 года назад
@@rickknight3823 hmmm🤔I like that
@rohitisalwayspositiv
@rohitisalwayspositiv 2 года назад
Thank you I can understand now why ribosomes are granular
@fasterpastor1000
@fasterpastor1000 9 лет назад
All of science put together doesn't know how complex a single living cell is.
@theultimatereductionist7592
@theultimatereductionist7592 6 лет назад
All of human literature, religion, politics, law, war, prisons, put together doesn't know how complex a single living cell is and has accomplished nothing to prove anything about them.
@MyJustOpinion
@MyJustOpinion 3 года назад
This video is so relevant today.
@crushsatan
@crushsatan 3 года назад
REMEMBER: This is the realm where the upcoming vaccine will be functioning; using messenger RNA. Why not use a traditional vaccine?
@imrannooraddin1876
@imrannooraddin1876 3 года назад
traditional vaccine being?
@gustavo1979
@gustavo1979 3 года назад
It takes too long.
@crushsatan
@crushsatan 3 года назад
@@gustavo1979 too long? How long is too long?
@ActiveStorage
@ActiveStorage 11 лет назад
this can be said about any chemical reaction which doesn't explain a specific interaction between specific protein molecules.
@Blondie2.0
@Blondie2.0 3 года назад
This is God's signature, the DNA is his Masterpiece to his children...
@Everton_Ferreira
@Everton_Ferreira 3 года назад
I got a question 🙋 Where the mRNA goes after the translation process? Is it recycled like the tRNA somehow? Is it eliminated by the lysosomes? Anyone?
@pawelpap9
@pawelpap9 12 лет назад
@DrStasso These are not simulations, these are animations, incorrect I may add. Both electron microscopy and X-ray crystallography allow one to see at least some of the events at a sufficient scale of details.
@mclbelen
@mclbelen 11 лет назад
I got a 100%!!! I couldn't believe it. I thought there was a typo haha :D This video helped me.
@reafdaw01
@reafdaw01 12 лет назад
Wow there are some really arrogant people here in the comments. What do you expect of a 3 min video? That it contains everything we know about the process? Yes, it's not very detailed for someone who allready had cell biology but then again why are you watching this?
@kotzwell88
@kotzwell88 12 лет назад
When clicking this I was worried that I am only undertaking an MD and not a PhD and this would be a bit over my head... I feel worried for humanity now.
@ChiDraconis
@ChiDraconis 3 года назад
Please consider Osteopathy
@rinnin
@rinnin 3 года назад
OMG. That is crazy! Did genetics many many years ago but wanted to remind myself how these new mRNA vaccines will work. What a machine!
@freedomthrufaith
@freedomthrufaith 3 года назад
When man acts like God or Nature it tends to mess it up Big time
@rickknight3823
@rickknight3823 3 года назад
@@freedomthrufaith agreed. Man can't even create a simple cell from scratch . What dose that tell us? The only real medicine is holistic natural medicine..
@sogal4christ
@sogal4christ 3 года назад
@@freedomthrufaith on
@denisviklov4596
@denisviklov4596 3 года назад
On official Moderna site they claim that it's not a vaccine but operational system like on your computer.
@rickknight3823
@rickknight3823 3 года назад
@@denisviklov4596 oh really?! I heard this but thought it was another curve ball distraction. I'll check it out. 👍
@ralphmalph6824
@ralphmalph6824 3 года назад
Eugenics comes to mind.
@MultiSciGeek
@MultiSciGeek 3 года назад
The animation was very good, compared to the usual 2d circles and squares.
@harold3065
@harold3065 3 года назад
And simple minded people continue to say we “evolved”? Seriously? This micro level complexity is greater than anything man can “create”. The God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob is real. More proof Genesis 1:27 is not a fairytale. Isn’t it time you took a moment to look at the alternate world view of Creation? The puzzle pieces all begin to fit perfectly. 🎚
@anguschippindale
@anguschippindale 2 года назад
Other way around champion... no way a god could create such complexity. Even said it yourself: "complexity is greater than anything man can create". Funny how we have evolved such complex brains but people continue to be blinded and clouded by fake ideals and stories that were written thousands of years ago.
@sneediusrexius
@sneediusrexius Год назад
its the mark of hte beast
@mahmouddridi386
@mahmouddridi386 3 года назад
Quran "" We will show them Our signs in the horizons and within themselves until it becomes clear to them that it is the truth. But is it not sufficient concerning your Lord that He is, over all things, a Witness?""
@DrStasso
@DrStasso 12 лет назад
@norman191000 These are simulations, there has never been motion capture of something so small (not to my knowledge at least). By sequencing the various subunits and studying the crystal structures of the transitions states of the reactions we can imply the mechanisms and the chemistry behind them.
@sethkazmer3154
@sethkazmer3154 10 лет назад
This is not at all advanced! In-fact, this is a greatly simplified version. Please label the video appropriately. Using the true molecular structures is a nice touch though.
@danstinson7687
@danstinson7687 4 года назад
Is every component in a cell or body created through this process? Im just now beginning to understand what DNA really is. I had know it was "the genetci code" but until I saw transcription and translation I didnt understand how it was used. So now my question is does this process make everything? For example mitochondria, golgi apparatus etc - do all the parts needed to make those components need to be "3d printed" with this translation process?
@PoleDancingDuo
@PoleDancingDuo 9 лет назад
Not very "Advanced"... covers what you might learn in a high school bio course.
@sammycol1571
@sammycol1571 2 года назад
Our Father who art in Heaven,never ceases to amaze us.
@2112deadsky
@2112deadsky 2 года назад
your father in heaven sadly did not make the Messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA)
@sydneycrosby1698
@sydneycrosby1698 2 года назад
Does the mRNA strand get destroyed after?
@anirbanmandal4228
@anirbanmandal4228 8 лет назад
Really helpful. It helps me in my higher studies.
@LaszloToth55
@LaszloToth55 3 года назад
As far as I know, a total of 21 amino acids are used to synthesize protein in cells. Therefore, there may be several types of t-RNA, each of which can only deliver a particular amino acid. This may be because the anticodon of the t-RNA must match the corresponding codon of the RNA that is intended to encode that particular amino acid. At a given moment, a particular codon of RNA is located in the input chamber of the ribosome. Because only one t-RNA can fit into the ribosome at its site of entry, it is mandatory that the anticodon of the t-RNA match the current codon of the RNA. The synthesis of the protein requires that only the t-RNA whose aticodone matches the current codon of the RNA enter the ribosome. The question is, how do t-RNAs know when one can enter the ribosome? - so how do they know if their own anticodon matches the current codon of the RNA?
@berban
@berban 3 года назад
I have no training in this but my assumption would be simply random interactions. There are 21 different types of tRNA bouncing around in the cytoplasm at all times and protein synthesis cannot continue until the correct tRNA happens to collide with the A site. In the video it shows them hopping on one after the other but in reality it would be much messier and you’d have tons of collisions before the ribosome added an amino acid. I’m pretty sure this is how most cellular processes work.
@LaszloToth55
@LaszloToth55 3 года назад
@@berban Is it possible that a particular codon in RNA somehow attracts the complementary codon that can be linked to it (the so-called transport molecule of a particular amino acid)? And can this attraction be felt outside the ribosome?
@berban
@berban 3 года назад
​@@LaszloToth55 Hm, I doubt it... what sort of force could you use for the attraction, magnetism or something? Cells can be attracted to sites in the body through complicated signaling mechanisms that involve both the cell itself and the blood vessels, but even that is only making the cells more likely to stop as they randomly pass by in the blood vessels. I don't think anything like that would be possible with these tiny molecules. but I really don't think it's necessary either... these things move so fast it's hard to comprehend
@LaszloToth55
@LaszloToth55 3 года назад
@@berban When atoms are connected to each other, there are electron donors and there are electron acceptors (sometimes both). An electrical interaction between electron donors and electron acceptors is established within a reasonable distance. It is conceivable that this phenomenon also plays a role in molecules: a codon (three base molecules) can be electrically attractive enough for a complementary codon. This may explain the rapid synthesis of proteins using ribosomes.
@Gr4nter
@Gr4nter 2 года назад
There are a few proofreading measures that the ribosome employs. First, a cognate match has to be made between the anticodon/codon pair on the tRNA and mRNA, respectively. Specifically the first two codons need to form precise Watson-Crick base pairs. This causes a conformation change on the small subunit of the ribosome which is then relayed and amplified to the large subunit. The tRNAs are carried to the ribosome via a small GTPase called EF-Tu (elongation factor). If a cognate pair is made between the first two codons of the mRNA and the second and third anticodons of the tRNA (they run antiparallel to each other), then the conformational change that this induces in the ribosomal small subunit is carried to the large subunit and allows for a domain on the large ribosome called the Sarcin-Ricin Loop to interact favorably with a histidine residue on the EF-Tu protein. This interaction then allows a water molecule to hydrolyze the GTP bound to active EF-Tu, and the free GDP dissociates. Once GTP is no longer bound, EF-Tu dissociates and the tRNA is effectively docked into the ribosome and locked into place, allowing for its movement to the P domain where the peptide bond is catalyzed.
@G8rfan61
@G8rfan61 5 лет назад
They need to dumb this down by a factor of 8.56 x 10⁴³² so I can understand it! I honestly could understand the game of cricket before I could understand cell replication.
@KimJong7hrill
@KimJong7hrill 12 лет назад
For "advanced" the video never mentioned initiation factors, elongation factors, Shine-Dalgarno sequences, N-formyl-met-tRNA...
@resistancenetwork1359
@resistancenetwork1359 3 года назад
Some of the "expert" commenting is amusing. The nerds of science may not understand that other professionals are just as interested in our health as they are in other areas that affect them. Like cooking! No one wants to eat half done collards or crunchy rice. So you learn the secrets of good food. Before learning how to cook you needed to know what to cook. In depth learning is always life changing...(BTW) Im a certified diesel mechanic and we remodel commercial and residential Real estate. But I don't want to take a vaccine that may not be safe. So I want better understanding so I don't think myself into an early grave or take the "mark" and end up in hell...🤦🏾‍♀️
@scottintexas
@scottintexas 3 года назад
Yes, all happened by chance. Hahahaha! If there is art, there is an artist; a building, there is a builder; a writing, there is a writer. Nothing “intelligent” happens by chance. The message for today is the key in mRNA is in the message being sent. When this can be manipulated by man, watch out!
@antisocialdistancing3
@antisocialdistancing3 3 года назад
hmmm
@bestryfulhd2102
@bestryfulhd2102 3 года назад
the athiest broke the common sense so you cant convince them , because they don't agree on the common sense that God gave us
@responsibleparty
@responsibleparty 3 года назад
Good logic. Scott in Texas doesn't feel right about anything complex arising over time on its own given enough time and space, so it mustn't be true. Humans are capable of better logic than this.
@terencekreft482
@terencekreft482 3 года назад
@Scott: Just because you don't understand it doesn't mean daddy did it.
@gata958e
@gata958e 3 года назад
@@bestryfulhd2102 Which one of the gods?
@cbernier3
@cbernier3 14 лет назад
@Jopau18 It depends on who you are. This is pretty advanced for a high school student, but it is not advanced at all for a graduate student.
@jellieLUVSyou
@jellieLUVSyou 11 лет назад
this is perfect for IB HL Biology :) its basically grade 11-grade 12 bio i was scared thinking it was going to be university level!
@satuon
@satuon 11 месяцев назад
Sounds complicated. Does anyone know how the ribosome, trna and mrna evolved - what were the intermediate steps or missing links until we got to the modern ribosome? Which of the 20 aminoacids and tRNAs got added first to this system?
@maximilianmorse9697
@maximilianmorse9697 2 года назад
Why is the deinterlacing so bad?
@september17502
@september17502 3 года назад
what will happen to mRNA after translation? reuse? or degraded?
@ryuk7883
@ryuk7883 2 года назад
degraded and ribonucleotids are being reused
@TheKwest1455
@TheKwest1455 12 лет назад
this youtube channel is gonna be useful...i hope
@m3735
@m3735 3 года назад
It has always wondered me why mRNA just could not make me taller.
@danieljust295
@danieljust295 3 года назад
That’s because small ant is not the same as big ant, basically they are two different creatures. The people were persuaded that they are equal and think they all should look the same, but we are in fact different although we have similar characteristics.
@m3735
@m3735 3 года назад
@@danieljust295 oh, that's very interesting.
@markburg8312
@markburg8312 7 лет назад
what about the chaperones? Shouldn t they be there to prevent incorrect folding ?
@olsza6969
@olsza6969 3 года назад
DNA- ATGC RNA - AUGC mRNA - AYGC
@winniethepoo81
@winniethepoo81 3 года назад
Had to look this up because of covid vaccine 😳
@rbspider
@rbspider Год назад
What causes the Mrna to leave the nucleus. Why does it even move? Same goes for all components.
@eonhet7826
@eonhet7826 2 года назад
What happens to the MRNA strand after it passes through the ribosome?
@sadismx2137
@sadismx2137 2 года назад
Destroyed
@eonhet7826
@eonhet7826 2 года назад
@@sadismx2137 That's not really a satisfying answer, matter can't really BE destroyed.
@sadismx2137
@sadismx2137 2 года назад
@@eonhet7826 degraded then, if you will
@aisham6170
@aisham6170 3 года назад
this is perfect! thank you
@fenrisunchained1926
@fenrisunchained1926 3 года назад
I know I am dumb but didn't they basically say you can change DNA with MRNA?
@ralphmalph6824
@ralphmalph6824 3 года назад
Medical tyranny is here
@Novak2611
@Novak2611 3 года назад
DNA is the original code, it never leaves the nucleus of a cell. If your cell wants to execute a command in DNA, it makes a small copy of the part of DNA this small copy is mRNA, mRNA leaves the nucleus and meet with the molecular machine in this video (Ribosome).
@mahdihasan6222
@mahdihasan6222 8 месяцев назад
why do religious people even bother coming to science videos if they think god is the only answer? Just go to videos about religion and leave science to the curious minds and the people who are trying to learn stuff
@yourfavoriteweapon92
@yourfavoriteweapon92 3 года назад
Love the speaker’s voice lol
@Blondie2.0
@Blondie2.0 3 года назад
I kept thinking it was Kathleen Turner don't know if your familiar with her she's an actress
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