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Ron Vale (UCSF, HHMI) 3: Molecular Motor Proteins: Regulation of Mammalian Dynein 

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www.ibiology.org/cell-biology...
Molecular motor proteins are fascinating enzymes that power much of the movement performed by living organisms. In this introductory lecture, I will provide an overview of the motors that move along cytoskeletal tracks (kinesin and dynein which move along microtubules and myosin which moves along actin). The talk first describes the broad spectrum of biological roles that kinesin, dynein and myosin play in cells. The talk then discusses how these nanoscale proteins convert energy from ATP hydrolysis into unidirectional motion and force production, and compares common principles of kinesin and myosin. The talk concludes by discussing the role of motor proteins in disease and how drugs that modulate motor protein activity can treat human disease.
Part 2 discusses recent work from the Vale laboratory and other groups, on the mechanism of movement by dynein, a microtubule motor that is less well understood than kinesin and myosin. The lecture discusses the unusual properties of dynein stepping along microtubules, which have been uncovered using single molecule techniques. The nucleotide-driven structural changes in the dynein motor domain (elucidated by X-ray crystallography and electron microscopy) are also described. A model for dynein movement in the form of an animation is presented. However, much remains to be done in order to understand how this motor works and to test which elements of this model are correct.
The third (last) part of the lecture explains how the movement of mammalian dynein is regulated by other proteins such dynactin and adapter proteins. It also describes the effect of post-translational modifications of tubulin on dynein motility. This talk features the use of single molecule imaging techniques and biochemical reconstitution to study these problems. Unanswered questions on dynein regulation are also presented.
Speaker Biography:
Ron Vale is a Professor of Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology at the University of California, San Francisco and an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. He is also the founder of the iBiology project.
Vale received a B.A. degree in biology and chemistry from the University of California, Santa Barbara, and a Ph.D. degree in neuroscience from Stanford University. His graduate and postdoctoral studies at the Marine Biological Laboratory led to the discovery of kinesin, a microtubule-based motor protein.
Dr. Vale’s honors include the Pfizer Award in enzyme chemistry, the Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research, and elections to the National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Medicine, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Besides studying the mechanism of motor proteins, Vale’s laboratory studies mitosis, RNA biology, and the mechanism of T cell signaling.

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27 июл 2024

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Комментарии : 64   
@astra-de8ff
@astra-de8ff 8 месяцев назад
These comprehensive explanations with beautiful illustrations are just amazing.❣❣
@sweetsue4204
@sweetsue4204 4 года назад
I watched all three sections and feel like I just took a great course in cellular biology. I’m in awe. 👍🏻
@williambunting803
@williambunting803 5 лет назад
This is all so incredibly thrilling and amazing. I’m blown away by the mechanism of of muscle movement on the one hand, and on the huge amount of molecular material that must some how arrive inside the cell wall to feed the protein builders and then the pace at which all of this must happen. One of the missing pieces is the delivery system to the protein machine. Other animations suggest that the molecular segments just float around in the cellular fluid, whereas this new work here seems to indicate that this is all done by a delivery system on a kind of microtubule scaffold system. Then the next question is how is the order of segment delivery regulated? Then one day I hope to learn how the shape of bones and skeletons is determined by the information in the DNA, bones being one of the most stable constructions in nature, consistent over millions of years of regeneration. Thank you for your fabulous work.
@dougb70
@dougb70 6 лет назад
It is amazing that you are able to explain these complex topics with ease. Very informative. Thanks for sharing.
@LeviSchuck
@LeviSchuck 7 лет назад
These principles were explained well in Parts 1-3 for non-bio viewers. Thank you.
@rockapedra1130
@rockapedra1130 4 года назад
This series is the coolest, mind-boggliest, awe-inspiringest thing I’ve ever seen! Wow! Thanks so much for sharing! The perseverance and success of your lab and collaborators is nothing short of amazing!
@merlin5by533
@merlin5by533 4 года назад
Brilliant Demonstration and Lecture.
@OKden2065
@OKden2065 3 года назад
Thank you so much, Ron for sharing all of these videos. I'm in awe of you scientists that figure all of this out. I'm in greater awe of your ability to explain the structure and function of these wonderful motor proteins. But the greatest awe is reserved for the one who designed all of this. I'm a plant scientist and agronomist feeling very, very humble tonight.
@contemplatively
@contemplatively Год назад
Just wow. This is the kind of stuff that makes me rethink my philosophy in life.
@Dr.JM1
@Dr.JM1 3 года назад
Evolution gave us the chance to develop the perfect machine, life will never cease to amaze us. Congrats for your research!
@campermobile3217
@campermobile3217 8 месяцев назад
🤣
@tibetsfinest
@tibetsfinest 4 года назад
Absolutely fascinating information
@radiofun232
@radiofun232 4 года назад
Brilliant, many thanks, I learned a lot. I see many "bindings" between "structures" in these video's and am interested in the way the bindings are made on a molecular level.
@yasirmohammedali
@yasirmohammedali 3 года назад
Hello doctor, thanks for the amazing videos
@seiran555
@seiran555 3 года назад
Very interesting lesson. Thank you :)
@numericalcode
@numericalcode Год назад
Fascinating stuff
@patrickv391
@patrickv391 4 года назад
Correcting my metabolic issues with diet brought me here and its awesome.
@Sclark2006
@Sclark2006 6 лет назад
This channel is awesome! Why so few likes?
@bzzzvzzze
@bzzzvzzze 4 года назад
Amazing!
@Stoplossed
@Stoplossed 6 лет назад
yo ron keep on rockin dude
@MrHichammohsen1
@MrHichammohsen1 Год назад
21:02 i think the mobility won't be stopped by junctions but nor go unnoticed. They produce a rotational element around the tube that makes it arrive a bit later than going straight from A to B
@chasingamurderer
@chasingamurderer 6 лет назад
Excellent
@kokopelli314
@kokopelli314 5 лет назад
Wonderful nanotechnology.
@patldennis
@patldennis 2 года назад
Except true technology is enacted from the top down (I need something to beat this nail into wood->designs hammer) whereas this sort of "nanotech" emerges from the bottom up to produce a derived function
@friedchicken1
@friedchicken1 3 года назад
My brain is literally turned into soup when I learn about this incredible stuff
@dhanukrish1765
@dhanukrish1765 5 лет назад
How the dye is applied? what is its molecular structure?
@JamesSamples
@JamesSamples 4 года назад
Thanks!
@dr_mohit
@dr_mohit 3 года назад
Thanks 👍
@glenliesegang233
@glenliesegang233 Год назад
14:40 the dynein "just sits there", it's "motor" does not run until cargo is attached. Wow!
@_John_P
@_John_P 3 года назад
The microtubules running around was genius (02:44)
@glenliesegang233
@glenliesegang233 Год назад
12:20 if gene, then protein, are the linking proteins for specific types of cargo "irreducibly complex" because without them, the dynein complex cannot transport the proper carrgo?
@glenliesegang233
@glenliesegang233 Год назад
9:00 so, the cellular highway system and the vehicles on it , with different points of origin, destinations, and unique types of cargo all arose by chance???
@tyronebigsby2169
@tyronebigsby2169 Год назад
Let’s gooooooooooo
@MrHichammohsen1
@MrHichammohsen1 Год назад
10:42 is there another technique used where they use multiple microscope lenses from multiple angles and do it in 3D in real time render using an AI?
@jonnes__4657
@jonnes__4657 6 лет назад
For me it is so amazing, that these molecules (proteins) can move in the cells and "explains" how we can live and move via the Myosin motors our body. For me it is not an so important question who started this incredible complex process of life, who developed the first cell? It happened like the universe is here and we do not know why and we never will know? Maybe we are all ETs coming from outside of earth via an Asteroid? The most incredible thing for me is how all the living creatures developed from this first cells in the very long evolution process. Unbelievable... .
@TheZenytram
@TheZenytram 5 лет назад
no wonder why evolution stayed at single cell life for 3by, one cell is already so fucking complex
@eminemlandsteiner168
@eminemlandsteiner168 4 года назад
I cannot hold any longer... BIG D!
@deeveevideos
@deeveevideos 3 года назад
Yes?
@JasminUwU
@JasminUwU 2 года назад
Lmao, I was looking for this comment
@davedumas0
@davedumas0 5 лет назад
@3:47 tough actin dynactin
@bryanryan4504
@bryanryan4504 4 года назад
Haha unfortunately no millennial will understand your joke
@SimonJackson13
@SimonJackson13 5 лет назад
Tyr for the shrinks art of motion no Tyr for the growing part of cell. Sounds legit...
@woloabel
@woloabel 5 лет назад
In vivo studies should be exactly as those of in vitro, but the matter is unnecessarily complicated further for end purpetually be funded and inviegled. The truth is just free and rather unmysterious....
@Tlimfree2010
@Tlimfree2010 4 года назад
Dynactic Dynein and BicD complex :D :D
@simongross3122
@simongross3122 4 года назад
Red, Green and Blue? Have they just invented organic television?
@brettm4867
@brettm4867 5 лет назад
The molecular motors geek me out😂life is fucking weird
@naimulhaq9626
@naimulhaq9626 5 лет назад
Dynein motility kinesin-myosin nucleotide-driven structure ATP hydrolysis dynactin motor protein Spellbinding insight into the function of a cell in transporting/motility of dynactin/dynein over micro-tubular channels during nucleotide-driven structural changes in the dynein motor domain, opening the door to a possible insight into the role played by quantum computing. The whole universe is quantum mechanical phenomenon, guided by a SINGLE probability wave function, explaining how planets revolve around their stars, how photosynthesis produce food for all plants, how entanglement helps the robin to navigate during migration, how tunneling helps the tadpole to grow limbs etc. Physicist Maldecena thinks the whole universe is a quantum computer. QC also is essential modus operandi for our five senses, our pineal gland, our brain and all our cells equipped with QC capabilities for us to survive and evolve. The following story will illustrate how our metabolism employs QC and protein production is facilitated by a coordination of our senses, our brain and our cells act like a computer with the environment acting like both as input signal, and our brain and our cells act both like the software and hardware of the computer, while the environment acts like the output: Once a patch of a forest was cleared and the trees felled, resulting into the lightly coated rats living there being exposed to predators. But the very next generation of rats were born with dark coat, enabling them to survive the predators, the subsequent generations, due to natural selection also survived. This is what happened: The clearing of the forest was the input that triggered caution in the mind of the original mother rats, to crave for dark coating, this signal was transmitted to the cells in the ovary of the mothers, who produced the necessary proteins needed to produce offsprings with dark coats, impacting the environment (which acts both as input and output to the computer). This example, probably will help us devise a QC, that might work in room temperature. The 3 part video amply shows that the QC, mentioned above works in two stages, our brain (pineal gland) sending signal to the cells, where kinesin-myosin and dynein motility, with the purpose of protein production, was simulated by the QC in the cell (producing the dark coated rats). I am not a biologist, but an electrical engineer, who had to study semiconductors, computers, QM etc. I learned how QC works , with superposition of quantum states of 0 and 1 (QUBITS) and I hope my observations may help make QC more viable and help create one, besides explaining the cells function in a new light, that may answer some of the unexplained questions in this video, treating the cell as a QC.
@TheZenytram
@TheZenytram 5 лет назад
dude, what you smoke?
@silviaalexandrecordeiro8400
@silviaalexandrecordeiro8400 2 года назад
🌹🌎🌍🌏🌹
@misium
@misium 6 лет назад
4:33 Are biologists really that ignorant of unit prefixes or was that just a mistake? Edit: answer at 5:43, thank evolution!
@patldennis
@patldennis 2 года назад
It was just a mistake. Try not to miss the big picture bc you're too busy picking nits
@andvokslife9596
@andvokslife9596 5 лет назад
Great thanks and glory to the Creator, for His wisdom!!!!
@richardwadd9769
@richardwadd9769 Год назад
There had to be some idiot who brought god into it.
@chasingamurderer
@chasingamurderer 6 лет назад
It's really neat how I creator is so brilliant that they can use such Pure Energy to create such living things. This includes the Earth. Lot of people don't understand that life has different levels thank God Earth is alive and well
@TheZenytram
@TheZenytram 5 лет назад
god has nothing to do with what are being explained here in this series.
@chintusct5258
@chintusct5258 4 года назад
any Indian here?
@SpiderF27
@SpiderF27 4 года назад
Do you looking for Indiana Jones ? ))
@deeveevideos
@deeveevideos 3 года назад
Praise God for creating life and its awe inspiring intricacy. Also gave us his son to believe on to gain eternal life! Jesus is our lord and only savior 🙏 🙌 ❤
@stefan2292
@stefan2292 3 года назад
I don't know about your God (much less his "son"), but somebody or something created this incredible machinery. It certainly could not have resulted from individual mutations and "natural selection" - that's just a fairy tale. What actually happened? We have no idea. My guess is that it will take another 100 years or so to find out.
@deeveevideos
@deeveevideos 3 года назад
@@stefan2292 The problem with that is they'll never use a creator as any legitimate form of explanation. Remember progress is n't going forward non-stop it means figure out you're on the wrong path backing up and then finding the right path. God bless you
@chasingamurderer
@chasingamurderer 6 лет назад
I'm very proud of the Germans and their white culture of curiosity. They really created a lot of things that all of us benefit from
@silviaalexandrecordeiro8400
@silviaalexandrecordeiro8400 2 года назад
🌹🌎🌍🌏🌹
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