sir, i'm a first year medical student, and tbh, nomatter what kind of subject i want to understand, i always find your vidoes there to help me, biochemistry, genetics, embryology, cytology, and so much more!! my studies are in french and i don't get a word of what our prof say, but HERE YOu ARE BEING A HERO for all of us students who need you, i'm forever grateful.
During my AP class I got three PP slides with pictures and bullets, leaving my class unsure of what these junctions do. Now watching this video, I fully understand!!!!!!!!! THANK YOU
I got all the information i need to prepare for my PhD first year viva from your videos. The best educational lessons i have ever watched. Thanks a lot.
Omg I will cry you're sooooo amazing 😭 my English is not that much but I understood every single word from you . Thank you I got everything . And keep like that 👍👍👍
Also desmosomes work in combination with the gap junctions for example in the heart muscolar tissue: where desmosome hold tight the adjacent cells opposing themselves to the mechanic stress of the contraction, and gap junctions guarantee the fastest kind of diffusion of the ions in the entire cardiac tissue.
thank you very much! it's very useful for me cause I'm having Biology test shortly and I have no idea what these intracellular are :(( once again, thanks for helping me review this! Have a nice day
Hello sir, many, many thanks to you for taking the time to teach us. Really, you are absolutely amazing and all of us, are so thankful for your helpful lectures. Way to go! :)
Does not include cadherins, integrins, selectins. Tight junctions include occludins and claudins also. It does not classify all the types of cell to cell connections. Try to update your content. I am a great fan of your teaching. But this video lacks important information.
Correct-ish. The desmosome core consists of cadherins, the tonofilaments may consist of keratin or other intermediate filaments (According to my interpretation of Becker's World of the Cell, 7th ed.)
thanks a lot. l didn't understand the difference between tight junction and desmosomes? do they found on the same side ? or always they found to gether? what about the difference in their function?sorry for disturbing you?
thank u , i really enjoy your lecture. i would ask u about glucose molecules it transfer from extracellular matrix to the cell by glut 4 facilitated diffusion right.. and can i say that this process is a type of endocytosis thanks again ...
This video greatly helped me, but it actually lacks a bit of content. Comments fill the gaps though. My teacher takes his time about teaching things and it is actually too slow for me to follow. I end up yawning sadly. But thanks to you I understood Junctions!
FALSE. The instructor should go at the pace that suits them. The viewer can control the pace of the lecture by slowing down or speeding up the replay, or pausing the video when necessary. Try clicking the 'settings' wheel and changing the playback speed to 0.75.
oh lol you replied.. i wasent expecting that so I looked it up b/c lots of youtubers only"read" comments( cough* ignores comments) but that.. ur the best
You did in ten minutes what my teacher hasn't done in two hours: you made me understand intercellular junctions! Thank you so much, Andrey :D
sir, i'm a first year medical student, and tbh, nomatter what kind of subject i want to understand, i always find your vidoes there to help me, biochemistry, genetics, embryology, cytology, and so much more!! my studies are in french and i don't get a word of what our prof say, but HERE YOu ARE BEING A HERO for all of us students who need you, i'm forever grateful.
yeah same with me but I'm from Turkey
his lecture is still fresh and extra ordinarily simplified!!!!! its 2022 ,still loving his video. quality factss brooo
This guy is great, the way he synthesises concepts makes them easy to understand, good work Prof
thought i would flunk my cell signalling and interaction exam but this was my life savior.god bless u!
Thank you. I understood more from your 10 minute lecture than I did in a 4 hour undergrad lecture!
During my AP class I got three PP slides with pictures and bullets, leaving my class unsure of what these junctions do. Now watching this video, I fully understand!!!!!!!!! THANK YOU
I got all the information i need to prepare for my PhD first year viva from your videos. The best educational lessons i have ever watched. Thanks a lot.
I am so greateful for such great content on TH-cam, thank you so much, I can't have enough of praising this guy
Just wanted to say thank you for your videos because you do an excellent job every time at explaining topics. Great job! Great teacher! :D
very high quality teaching style. Thank you!
Clear and concise explanations which will stick in my mind. Thank you for such high quality lectures!
Andy Ablett You're welcome Andy!
very high quality style of teaching ,sir you always simplify the way of learning . lots of respect to you .
May God bless uuuuuuuu million times.... Tons of thanks .. I lov ur all educational videos
Shefeek Ps Thanks for the kind words! Glad you like them :)
@@AKLECTURES wakaipa wangu
Your biochemistry lectures are on point!
Omg I will cry you're sooooo amazing 😭 my English is not that much but I understood every single word from you . Thank you I got everything . And keep like that 👍👍👍
Awesome!! Thank you! :-)
AK LECTURE is the best .. THANK YOU for every thing 👍🏻
Thank you so much, you've explained this so well! I watched this for the second time this morning and I understood it all!
Your way in explanation is a magic ........really thank u
Also desmosomes work in combination with the gap junctions for example in the heart muscolar tissue: where desmosome hold tight the adjacent cells opposing themselves to the mechanic stress of the contraction, and gap junctions guarantee the fastest kind of diffusion of the ions in the entire cardiac tissue.
you are very honest in giving your infurmation. bless you.
Very clear explanation, continue spreading knowledge 💪🏾
this was rly helpful for my biology exam ty :) greetings from germany
Omg! He is just a great professor!🌹👌
Most dedicated teacher
wowww sir you re one of the reasons i continue studying biology
Happy birthday @AK LECTURE
thanks! you are much better than my college doctor in teaching😂😂
thank you very much! it's very useful for me cause I'm having Biology test shortly and I have no idea what these intracellular are :((
once again, thanks for helping me review this! Have a nice day
you' re the best, I always watch your videos.
This was so much appreciated! Thank you so much!
Superb teaching sir I understood everything u taught great job..
It helped a lot man. Thank you for that
Thank you very much you did everything in a few minutes
Ohhhh your explanation is my bessst
There's also Junctions that are formed with Cadherin.. Could you please talk about that in some future video?
awesome video dude fantastic explanation
Good explanation ! I like it . thank you so much .
Norhud D You're welcome :)
you are a legend i swear
Hello sir, many, many thanks to you for taking the time to teach us. Really, you are absolutely amazing and all of us, are so thankful for your helpful lectures. Way to go! :)
Tania Flores Thanks Tania! Keep on learning! :)
awesome video...but what if a cell dies?
will the connection break and everything fails??
Thank you for the clear explanation!
really really great video. thank you
Yo bhai mazaa aa gaya
Super helpful! Thanks!
Thank you so much!
Wonderful ! I like your videos
it's very mesmerize me thank u alot
I will mention your name when I graduate really. THANKS A LOT
helped me a lot thenx to YOU
Awesome video, thank you
Thank you ..great explanation!
The best lecture sir
Really helpful thumbs 👍 up
Best explanation
Thank you SO much for this!
This is great, Thank you!
Wow!!...I just subscribed..Bingo!!!
Very clear & helpful!!
Thanks a lot & Keep it up please!!
-Somy
dreamscometrue you're welcome Somy! :)
So helpful! Thank you!
Alison Goodkind Ali! Hope you're doing well! :-)
Thanks you too! This is helping me study for my Mcats!! R u in med school?
Alison Goodkind check your inbox :-)
Does not include cadherins, integrins, selectins.
Tight junctions include occludins and claudins also. It does not classify all the types of cell to cell connections. Try to update your content. I am a great fan of your teaching. But this video lacks important information.
love it so much! thanks
thank you very much . in which field you are specialist?
thank you very much, that was helpful
Afra H you're welcome Afra
Is there a playlist for this topic??
thank you
I think there should be cadherin instead of keratin in desmosomes
Correct-ish. The desmosome core consists of cadherins, the tonofilaments may consist of keratin or other intermediate filaments (According to my interpretation of Becker's World of the Cell, 7th ed.)
Thanks ,,,very clear
thanks a lot. l didn't understand the difference between tight junction and desmosomes? do they found on the same side ? or always they found to gether? what about the difference in their function?sorry for disturbing you?
Thank you Sir alot
thank u , i really enjoy your lecture.
i would ask u about glucose molecules it transfer from extracellular matrix to the cell by glut 4 facilitated diffusion right.. and can i say that this process is a type of endocytosis thanks again ...
Very helpful, then you.
Victor Valdez You're welcome Victor.
How do you repair leaky gut?
Bless you!!
What exactly is difference b/w lumen and extracellular space in this case?
This video greatly helped me, but it actually lacks a bit of content. Comments fill the gaps though. My teacher takes his time about teaching things and it is actually too slow for me to follow. I end up yawning sadly. But thanks to you I understood Junctions!
I have my semester exams in 10 days and here I am
Super ❤❤
can heat such as a flame pass through tight junctions?
Ok I have quasthion why you didn't explain the adhering junction while it's consider from the junctio junction ?
dyoomah17 Because they are similar to desmosomes in that they function to stick the cells together. :)
+AK LECTURES ok thanks ☺
yay i finally understand
don't know how to thank u !
Suppper bro....
Take a shot straight to my intracellular fluid every time he says ACTUALLY
Very informative but please slow down !!
krystal96 Okay! will try :)
FALSE. The instructor should go at the pace that suits them. The viewer can control the pace of the lecture by slowing down or speeding up the replay, or pausing the video when necessary. Try clicking the 'settings' wheel and changing the playback speed to 0.75.
you are an academic elder
You keep on saying "adjacent cell" over and over . But what does than mean?
Adjacent = next to..
oh lol you replied.. i wasent expecting that so I looked it up b/c lots of youtubers only"read" comments( cough* ignores comments) but that.. ur the best
Progress,
Fam
Lad
too much nfo. given, not bad.
mface akaipa uyu
I think the title should be "INTERcellular junction".That makes me confused
thank you