Love this video I'm in year 13 and was trying to do a research project and this explains perfectly what I didn't understand from a research article thank you.
This is good! Thank you. Has answered some questions - like how when a virus attacks a cell and (via neurominidase) the cell tries to Lyse it, it then ruptures by the change in conformation of hemagglutinin in the acidic environment. Good stuff...
So which of the 3 forms of death are used for cells that have reached the Hayflick limit? Are there pros/cons to senescent cells? Or, ideally, they would be removed (preferably via apoptosis)? If post-mitotic cells don't divide, how does the body fix cells that are damaged?
Think the same means after Hemispherectomy, removal of one lung the Left remaining hemisphere grows and occupies a little bit less space than both the hemispheres did AND a single lung occupies more space than it normally does when both the 🫁 are present (respectively).
Not sure I understand the autophagy part. Organelle replacement, or restructure of only a portion. How about mitochondria with ros damaged dna. And how successful is this? How does the dna get rectified in the autophagy. Especially if the mother has a mutation already.
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Love this video I'm in year 13 and was trying to do a research project and this explains perfectly what I didn't understand from a research article thank you.
This is good! Thank you. Has answered some questions - like how when a virus attacks a cell and (via neurominidase) the cell tries to Lyse it, it then ruptures by the change in conformation of hemagglutinin in the acidic environment. Good stuff...
For influenza viri...
Thank you so much I love your way of explaining
This video is awesome, I wish I had it to help with my essay last semester ! Keep it up ! 😄
Perfect 💛🕊
keep on doing this kinda video!!!!its good....really helpful
This video is very helpful
It's has helped me with my academic year
So which of the 3 forms of death are used for cells that have reached the Hayflick limit?
Are there pros/cons to senescent cells? Or, ideally, they would be removed (preferably via apoptosis)?
If post-mitotic cells don't divide, how does the body fix cells that are damaged?
Think the same means after Hemispherectomy, removal of one lung the Left remaining hemisphere grows and occupies a little bit less space than both the hemispheres did AND a single lung occupies more space than it normally does when both the 🫁 are present (respectively).
HOW
Could you do a detailed video on apoptosis?
th-cam.com/video/12gKynozV10/w-d-xo.html
Jeppe Følner o
Just what I needed.... Thanks ey
Hi thank you for the video. I wish you also had a video on extrinsic and intrinsic death parhways and caspases.
many thanks
Awesome video :)
Your Facebook page link is misspelled :)
Not sure I understand the autophagy part. Organelle replacement, or restructure of only a portion. How about mitochondria with ros damaged dna. And how successful is this? How does the dna get rectified in the autophagy. Especially if the mother has a mutation already.
A King
Progress,
Could you go over the different kinds of necrosis please.
Please...upload some video from the topic "ultrastructure of eukaryotic cell"
please i need the continuation of cardiac output video .
Osm
Probably, i add here pyroptosis :) and, may be, transdifferentiation ...
U can't even say the name...what am I doing here?
wrg, no stress nmw
Lol you lost all credibility when you couldn't pronounce autophagy