If you’d like to practise the material covered in this video, check out our platform at www.cognitoedu.org - it's totally free, and has been built to make learning and revision easy as possible. The main features are: - Lessons organised by topic, only the lessons relevant to your specific exam board and tier are shown. - Automatic progress tracking. Progress bars tell you at a glance what you’re doing well at, and what you need to spend some time on. - Practise quizzes so you can test your knowledge. You can quiz yourself on any combination of topics you like. - A huge number of fully-hinted questions that take you step-by-step through some of the trickiest calculations & concepts. - A comprehensive bank of past exam papers, organised both by year, and also by topic. Amadeus & Tom
Have my GCEs in a month and there's nothing worse than starting on past papers and realizing you know nothing so I'm immensely grateful for this video. Gonna come back with an A* hopefully all because of you TYSM 😭
every time I have these massive panics about my science term papers ur videos just appear like a savior. I actually understood smth thank you so much. I'll be back with an A+ for bio
Thank you for explaining that most chromosome drawings are confusing as they show a cell undergoing mitosis and not in its normal state. Why do they do this, I have spent hours going around in circles as each chromosome seemed to contain 4 DNA strands when they don't normally.
3:08 Question: are red blood cells red blood cells because they produce the protein hemoglobin? Or do red blood cells produce hemoglobin? Any help appreciated!🙏
thank you for this video, i can now understand topic 6 now, i just now need to go over all of it now. But could i ask a question? So lets say my hand for example, made up of a bunch of skin cells, which all have a nucleus and DNA for protein synthesis. So one skin cell in my body is programmed to create specific chain of amino acids to make a protein, now will my all my skin cells on my hand produce different chains of amino acids or would they all produce the same exact chain of amino acids? or will they produce different amino acids every different cell?
Thanks Adham! Basically, all of your skin cells will produce a similar set of proteins. So there will be some proteins that all of them make (by coding for the exact same sequence of amino acids), and other proteins that only some of them make, depending on what type of skin cell they are (you don't need to know about the different types). When they produce the same protein they will use the same amino acid sequence to do it. Hope that helps :)
hi love the video. I still have a question though. Its kind of stupid I guess but I would be really grateful if you could help. Is chromosome part of a DNA or does DNA make up a chromosome? What I understood from the video is that DNA is divided into 46 sections called chromosomes but on google it says 'each chromosome is made up of dna'.
Hey, I'm not cognito nor a teacher but oh well...Chromosomes are made of DNA and all the genetic information of one's body is distributed among these chromosomes
Oooh at 2:11 it makes so much more sense . Thank u this is very helpful. I had a question , so I understand the part where the gene codes for a specific amino acid sequence to make a protein , which determines what the cell type is , but how do genes and dna determine inherited characteristics like eye colour , and like how does it work ? So suppose a muscle cell in the leg , will it have a gene to code for eye colour?
It'll be random and depends on the alleles you inherit from your parents. You can find out the likelihood of inheriting a particular characteristic using a Punnett square.
And the muscle cell wouldn't have Gene's to control the eye, all our inherited characteristics would already have been determined whilst we were developing in the womb. I wasn't too sure on how to answer your question so sorry if it doesn't make too much sense.
INTERESTING LESSON.CHROMOSOMES ARE ALSO A PART OF DNA,WHICH IS LONG LIKE A THRAD.GENES ARE THE ONES WHICH GIVES OUR FEATURES.THE CHARACTERISTICS THAT WE INHERIT FROM OUR PARENTS ARE FEATURED BY OUR GENES.YOUR HAIR COLOUR,RACE,EYE COLOUR AND GENETIC DISEASES ARE INHERITED FROM YOUR PARENTS THRUOGH THE GENES.DNA CONTAINS MANY PROTEINS.
When you explained genomes in your concluding part, you mentioned: "...when humans left Africa". Can you please elaborate on that and how it relates to the topic. Thank you.
Its refering to the human genome project you need to know three things: •one of those things is that human migrated from Africa thousands of years ago and that can be shown through DNA (so we can track the migration of our ansestors and understand them better through there movement but i think the explaination to why is beyond GCSE so wouldnt concern us much unless we're interested but he does explain this in the video) •different diseases caused by genes (inhertited disorders like polydactyly or cystic fiberosis) •and how we can treat these inherited disorder
I'm not asking for year,I'm not asking for a month.just give me a day because why am I only now getting scared of my bio test just when I'm about to sleep
@@aoy1889 the sex’s r male and female ( plus intersex tho that’s quite rare ), but genders r what ur talking abt like being trans or non-binary. It’s just the word gender became synonymous with the word sex even though the two mean different things. Gender meaning how we express ourselves and sex meaning our biological parts ect
@@aoy1889 both a gender and a sex, you can have the biological sex of a women while still not identifying as one, or you can be a biological male and still identify as a women. Plain and simple a women is anyone who identifies as a women.
I am not sure if anyone notified you, however, at 5:26 you spelt the noun “strangire” incorrect. It is actually spelt strangire. Please don’t make this mistake again and delete the video.
If you’d like to practise the material covered in this video, check out our platform at www.cognitoedu.org - it's totally free, and has been built to make learning and revision easy as possible. The main features are:
- Lessons organised by topic, only the lessons relevant to your specific exam board and tier are shown.
- Automatic progress tracking. Progress bars tell you at a glance what you’re doing well at, and what you need to spend some time on.
- Practise quizzes so you can test your knowledge. You can quiz yourself on any combination of topics you like.
- A huge number of fully-hinted questions that take you step-by-step through some of the trickiest calculations & concepts.
- A comprehensive bank of past exam papers, organised both by year, and also by topic.
Amadeus & Tom
It’s really good! I look forward to the maths section soon. You are so underrated
thank you
not me the night before my biology exam trying to understand the whole semester
shit, I can relate)))
lol, similar
😭😭😭
Sameee 😭
Literally me
Have my GCEs in a month and there's nothing worse than starting on past papers and realizing you know nothing so I'm immensely grateful for this video. Gonna come back with an A* hopefully all because of you TYSM 😭
SAME WE GOT THIS!!!! GOOD LUCK FOR YOUR PAPERS
@@roshini.-.6384 GOOD LUCKKK, MINE IS ON TUESDAY BUT WHENEVER YOURS IS, SLAY IT
@@areebabilal1481 WAAAAAAAAA MINE IS ALSO ON TUESDAY GOOD LUCK DUDE. SLAY IT DHBWEUFJF
@@roshini.-.6384 OMG HOW WAS YOURSSS
@@areebabilal1481 I DIED WITH LIKE THE AUXIN QUESTION BUT OTHER THAN THAT I WAS OK???? WBU?
God bless all the team members in Cognito you guys are a blessing to many
every time I have these massive panics about my science term papers ur videos just appear like a savior. I actually understood smth thank you so much. I'll be back with an A+ for bio
Thanks Minyong, we wish you all the luck 🤞
@@Cognitoedu I got a 100%, and I Was the only one to get it in the class:) u totally deserve all the credit,,, tysm again!
@@김민용-x2z Well done!
not to sound nity picky but 3:38 misspelling of stranger as "strager" it caught me of guard and made burst into laughter.
Oops!
you nity picky
Not to sound nity picky but your misspelling of "off as "of" caught me off guard and made me laugh.
not to sound nity picky but it's NIT-PICKY NOT NITY PICKY LOL
@@rainbowdonky176 not to sound nity picky pt 2 but!!! you forgot the second " marker to close "off"
I never really understood DNA but this really helped, thank you
Thank you for explaining that most chromosome drawings are confusing as they show a cell undergoing mitosis and not in its normal state. Why do they do this, I have spent hours going around in circles as each chromosome seemed to contain 4 DNA strands when they don't normally.
You are literally a life saver!!!!! THANK YOU SO VERY MUCH for doing all of this! A huge help honestly!
no cuz this actually made sm sense i was really confused abt this at first now i understand sm better thanks
Really well explained, thank you
Thanks Lucy, really good to hear it helped :)
salome
@@Cognitoedu salome
Back again to say thank you for these wonderful videos❤️
THANK YOU 😊
The fact that I’ve been getting A*’s in biology because of Cognito videos is insane 😭🙏🏽
3:08 Question: are red blood cells red blood cells because they produce the protein hemoglobin? Or do red blood cells produce hemoglobin? Any help appreciated!🙏
Hemoglobin is an important component which help our red blood cells transport oxygen. If I don't misunderstood. c:
Iron in our blood together with hemoglobin make the blood red. Also the oxygen contributes to its colour
I’m watching ur videos (chem,physics,bio) one day before my science exam lol
thank you for this video, i can now understand topic 6 now, i just now need to go over all of it now.
But could i ask a question?
So lets say my hand for example, made up of a bunch of skin cells, which all have a nucleus and DNA for protein synthesis. So one skin cell in my body is programmed to create specific chain of amino acids to make a protein, now will my all my skin cells on my hand produce different chains of amino acids or would they all produce the same exact chain of amino acids? or will they produce different amino acids every different cell?
Thanks Adham! Basically, all of your skin cells will produce a similar set of proteins. So there will be some proteins that all of them make (by coding for the exact same sequence of amino acids), and other proteins that only some of them make, depending on what type of skin cell they are (you don't need to know about the different types).
When they produce the same protein they will use the same amino acid sequence to do it.
Hope that helps :)
@@Cognitoedu It did, thank you!
Your videos are the best
This video is very informative. I have a PPE coming up and this has greatly helped me understand the subject. Thanks
Glad we could help DF!!
Thank you for your interesting lessons!
This was really helpful since i had an exam about DNA and RNA and chromosomes
Thank you. A very clear explanation.
hi love the video. I still have a question though. Its kind of stupid I guess but I would be really grateful if you could help. Is chromosome part of a DNA or does DNA make up a chromosome? What I understood from the video is that DNA is divided into 46 sections called chromosomes but on google it says 'each chromosome is made up of dna'.
Hey, I'm not cognito nor a teacher but oh well...Chromosomes are made of DNA and all the genetic information of one's body is distributed among these chromosomes
biology gcse paper 1 literally tomorrow and i'm trying desperately to understand 😭😭😭
Omdddd literallyyyyy😭😭😭😭😢😢😢
Mine tmr and same
Good luck...
I think more country subtitles are needed because I really want to watch your videos but I'm not good at English 😭
My EXAM IS TOMORROW
My exam will start in 3 hours.
Same..😂
Thank you for the lucid explanation :)
Oooh at 2:11 it makes so much more sense . Thank u this is very helpful. I had a question , so I understand the part where the gene codes for a specific amino acid sequence to make a protein , which determines what the cell type is , but how do genes and dna determine inherited characteristics like eye colour , and like how does it work ? So suppose a muscle cell in the leg , will it have a gene to code for eye colour?
It'll be random and depends on the alleles you inherit from your parents. You can find out the likelihood of inheriting a particular characteristic using a Punnett square.
And the muscle cell wouldn't have Gene's to control the eye, all our inherited characteristics would already have been determined whilst we were developing in the womb.
I wasn't too sure on how to answer your question so sorry if it doesn't make too much sense.
Great video and I love it 😻
3:38 spelling mistake on ' stranger's ' you put strager's, none the less a very informative video
You didn't use a capital for 'spelling', none the less, a very informative comment.
@@3IOnTjXpbH5HxzkVTjlKcz lol
@@3IOnTjXpbH5HxzkVTjlKcz 😂😂
@@3IOnTjXpbH5HxzkVTjlKcz pahaha too good
Very good GCSE English analytical skills.
I watch this out of curiosity, not for school💋
Why do individual chromosomes look like sycamore tree seeds?
This was very helpful
tysm everytihng looked hard after watching i understand everything
I think at 3:38, the word stranger's is spelt wrong.
Alright now turn around
@@Wandering1432 bro what
Can it be suitable for Cambridge o level?
Yes 🙂
Thank you so much it really helped..anyone can understand it easily...great🤘❤🤘❤🤘❤😊
Simple and Excellent !
really helps tysm
good video
hey mommy
yes
thankyou for this! however, you spelt stranger wrong, not wanted to come off rude or anything :))
*wanting
Aha thanks for the notice 😎 - I’ve made a note for when this gets redrawn! Cheers, Tom
INTERESTING LESSON.CHROMOSOMES ARE ALSO A PART OF DNA,WHICH IS LONG LIKE A THRAD.GENES ARE THE ONES WHICH GIVES OUR FEATURES.THE CHARACTERISTICS THAT WE INHERIT FROM OUR PARENTS ARE FEATURED BY OUR GENES.YOUR HAIR COLOUR,RACE,EYE COLOUR AND GENETIC DISEASES ARE INHERITED FROM YOUR PARENTS THRUOGH THE GENES.DNA CONTAINS MANY PROTEINS.
i love your videos and everything but you speak to fast in them and not explained well but other than that your videos are 100% AMAZING!!
doing this the night before my exam 😭😭😭
thank you
thanks boss
ipone
Soooo helpful... Thanks a lot ❤️
thank you so much
3:40 you spelt stranger's wrong 😁
1:07 he only did 38 different sections lol
Thanks to u
Mucho gracias
gcse remote learning anyone?
u should apply some backround music.
some people get distracted. i personally wouldn't like it as much
Typo at 3:37, Strager's > Stranger's* 😅
Brilliant !!
When you explained genomes in your concluding part, you mentioned: "...when humans left Africa". Can you please elaborate on that and how it relates to the topic. Thank you.
Its refering to the human genome project you need to know three things:
•one of those things is that human migrated from Africa thousands of years ago and that can be shown through DNA (so we can track the migration of our ansestors and understand them better through there movement but i think the explaination to why is beyond GCSE so wouldnt concern us much unless we're interested but he does explain this in the video)
•different diseases caused by genes (inhertited disorders like polydactyly or cystic fiberosis)
•and how we can treat these inherited disorder
@@rabbitman8535 oh I see, thank you for your time and explanation.👍🏾
@@ceceish8295 my mans tried to pull the racism card lol
seing this for my essay in uni 😶
I'm not asking for year,I'm not asking for a month.just give me a day because why am I only now getting scared of my bio test just when I'm about to sleep
i can already feel ppl getting pressed in the comments cuz he didnt mention the 'other 60 (and counting) genders'
gender is not the same as sex, he’s talking abt ur sex
@@marshroom_ wdym lmao
@@aoy1889 the sex’s r male and female ( plus intersex tho that’s quite rare ), but genders r what ur talking abt like being trans or non-binary. It’s just the word gender became synonymous with the word sex even though the two mean different things. Gender meaning how we express ourselves and sex meaning our biological parts ect
@@marshroom_ so whats a woman
@@aoy1889 both a gender and a sex, you can have the biological sex of a women while still not identifying as one, or you can be a biological male and still identify as a women. Plain and simple a women is anyone who identifies as a women.
4:02 u spelt strangers wrong. But great video.
God bless
❤❤❤❤❤
I hit subscribe and like it because I am so thankful for your video.
Legends come one night before the exam
Thankz it really helped👌👌
This being for GCSE, I watching it in 8TH GRADE
What if more than 23
how do you make your videos?
arigato gouzimas
stranger is spelled incorrectly :)
My exam is literally tomorrow
You spelt stranger wrong
Alright now come on top of me 😊
nice
am i the only one who counted all the chromosomes when they split up at 1:04
How can an athiest do not believe in god,the DNA is litteraly a sign
4:02 secs strager's hehehe
Hola
Hmmm
Im i the only one who has nothing to do with biology but is here just for the sake of learning 😅
same, i dont go to school but i want to learn eveerrythingg especially biology
you spelt stranger wrong :)
Alright now oil up nigga
I am not sure if anyone notified you, however, at 5:26 you spelt the noun “strangire” incorrect. It is actually spelt strangire. Please don’t make this mistake again and delete the video.
so close! it’s actually spelt stranger and it’s really not that deep get a grip
😂😂😂WHAT?!!
Imagine learning on TH-cam the inschool
aha
1:56 Can't be saying that in 2023
Frrr
algorithm
Me at 2024
Welch Pike
vodozy daziz
gender fighters don't like this video at all
Done
🥀🥀🤪🤪🤪🤪🤪🤪
nahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
Am i the only one here who is not understanding a word🥲✨️
👏👏👏