FYI, Really enjoying your videos but you may want to edit the text "basis of the **** foundation" at 1:49. Turn on CC to see what I mean. Jerry E Shepherd And at 8:55 you say the "isomers have same structure but different formulas."
i have a habit to learn through audiovisual pattern and in this way i began understand many things explained more rapidly than to read the related book. thanks for uploading a highly structured biochemistry videos for i am in engaging with biophysics on account of these material are highly crucial for the threshold for my biophysics stuffs. if i have perplexity, i will ask for Mrs. Marlana immediately...
You can't always have twice as much hydrogen as carbon unless you are referring only to monosaccharides. Once they bind together, they lose a H2O group for every bond, changing the hydrogen to carbon ratio.
Fantastic job, Marlana! Concise and straight to the point. Congrats.
Amazing lecture, on point and so clear, easy to memories specially when you put everything up in as visuals..
great,smooth tutoring..Thanks a lot Ms.Mucciarone
wonderful..... thank you so much for taking the time to post this
Amazing, please make some more videos about carbs and proteins. Bless ya
Of you are studying for the MCAT, DAT, OAT, etc please watch her videos, questions literally come out from what she teaches, verbatum!
You are the best teacher
Thank you so much ! This was very simple and explained in great details
"Yes, dna has sugar in it. How crazy is that?"
Why I find that sentence hilarious
i dont know
HHAHAHAHHA
Thanks!
Super cool presentation👍
Great channel! Thanks for the great content!
yours video are life thank you:)
Thank you for this Nice explanation..
am benefiting a lot thanx job well done
thank u Ms too much interesting about biochemistry
Thank you so much for this very informative video...
good lecture, compliments
Amazing videos
Under monosaccharides the last line u have said same structure but different formula ?they r isomers right
Monosaccharides are isomers - they have the same formula but have different structures.
very excellent explaination
This is great.... Thank you!
I do have a question. Why do "Glucose" and "Galactose" have the same chemical compound but have different structures?
isomers?
Yes, they are isomers - molecules with the same formula but are arranged differently.
+Marlana Mucciarone thanks for clear explanation.
because galactose= glucose+lactose
I do really get a lot of benefits
FYI, Really enjoying your videos but you may want to edit the text "basis of the **** foundation" at 1:49. Turn on CC to see what I mean. Jerry E Shepherd And at 8:55 you say the "isomers have same structure but different formulas."
can you tell me how oligosaccharide comes in carbohydrate
Hello OTING Oligosaccharides are basicly small uniits of sugar and it is basicly carbohhydrate
Oligosaccharides are sugars that are made up of 2 to 10 monosaccharides
thankyou for this well teaching
thanks, easy to understand
i have a habit to learn through audiovisual pattern and in this way i began understand many things explained more rapidly than to read the related book. thanks for uploading a highly structured biochemistry videos for i am in engaging with biophysics on account of these material are highly crucial for the threshold for my biophysics stuffs. if i have perplexity, i will ask for Mrs. Marlana immediately...
stanley bahy Hola prro
You are an awesome instructor. Im not your student but im talking a biochemistry class somewhere else and until now I was dead
thank you very much madam i have one idea about biochemistry
You can't always have twice as much hydrogen as carbon unless you are referring only to monosaccharides. Once they bind together, they lose a H2O group for every bond, changing the hydrogen to carbon ratio.
Awesome
Great
Think u alot
"crunchy" part of insects... eeeekk
At first ithought u achild😅