I am form India We study this right now I am 16 and in 11th grade. School is till 12th grade. After that I want to do MBBS that's basically the study we need to do for being a doctor and is for 4.5 years . After this we have a pg examination where our rank decides what speciality we get and then we have a 3 year course. And at the last if you want to do super specialization for cardiology or neurology or orthopedics you gotta study for 2 or 3 more years
So I don't know if you should be learning that in college or not but we learn it in school But then again schools and colleges are quite dft in dft parts of the world So I was curious
although it's just 5 minute I've been at this video for an hour trying to study and understand it alongside with notes from my lectures. I feel like this has help me a lot so hopefully I'll do well in exams TT
G actins bind together to form trimers not tetramers. Please look into it. Also, the definition of treadmilling doesn't seem to be right. I referred to "The cell a molecular approach" by Geffrey and Lipincott's molecular biology
i cannot begin to tell you how grateful i am that you make videos like this!!!!
As far as I know this is the best video on this topic
This should be at the TOP of search results.
you should upload more videos! u are literally saving my grades in college lmao
You studying this in college
We are studying it in school
Sorry I am just curious
@@sananaz2940 You're seeing this in HS? I'm only learning this with this much detail rn at my second year in college
I am form India
We study this right now
I am 16 and in 11th grade. School is till 12th grade. After that I want to do MBBS that's basically the study we need to do for being a doctor and is for 4.5 years .
After this we have a pg examination where our rank decides what speciality we get and then we have a 3 year course.
And at the last if you want to do super specialization for cardiology or neurology or orthopedics you gotta study for 2 or 3 more years
So I don't know if you should be learning that in college or not but we learn it in school
But then again schools and colleges are quite dft in dft parts of the world
So I was curious
Yes, some advanced High School students (9-12 grade) are learning this, but mostly college students
this video explained that process so well! i have a way greater understanding of Microfilaments now!
I have exam in 2 hours and your video is going to be my saving grace. Thank you!
I hope you do well!
Tanx a lot arguably the best video abt this topic in the internet
Amazing explanation! Thank you so much
Great job! Very easy to comprehend
Right at the point thank u
Love it!
Thank you for this video!
great video, keep it up.
How fast are these processes - of building and deconstructing - after nucleation? Many thanks
I depends, but the most durable filament exist for as much as a couple minutes before hydrolization makes them dissappear.
Great presentation! Thank You
best explanation ever! thank you!!!
Merci infiniment ❤
Incredible!
Thank you so much. :-) :-) :-) You are awesome.
although it's just 5 minute I've been at this video for an hour trying to study and understand it alongside with notes from my lectures. I feel like this has help me a lot so hopefully I'll do well in exams TT
I’m glad it’s been helpful!
Nice video
What did he say at 3:16
Arp2/3 is the thing he said
good video. thanks!
Thankyou Very much 💙
REALLY HELPFUL
thank you so much, exam tomorrow!!!
🙏
G actins bind together to form trimers not tetramers. Please look into it.
Also, the definition of treadmilling doesn't seem to be right. I referred to "The cell a molecular approach" by Geffrey and Lipincott's molecular biology
Thank you that was helpfull
THANKSSSSSS❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
thank u so much
Wow!