Till now I was assuming that large T antigen directly binds to p53 and causes transformation...Now I learned molecular mechanism of Transformation by T antigen.!!!
I have a question. And I know the answer is I dont know. But if a person caught a virus from someone with a strong immune system, could the impact of the virus be say weaker than if that same person had caught the virus from someone with a weak immune system? Like, the hypothesis here is that the virus got the hell beat out of it from the person with the strong system, so the impact is diluted.
You don't "beat up" a virus as if it was a unit. More like you kill some of it's children...who are clones. Therefore each child is the same virus (give or take some mutations here and there). That being said, if a stronger sick person doesn't cough or sneeze as much, you "might" catch less virus children from him vs. someone else coughs and sneezes everywhere. In this sense the environment will be "diluted" of the virus. But if you happen to wipe 100 virus units from either person's snot on your nose, the impact is exactly the same
Thanks Professor Racaniello for another lecture!
Thank you so much for highly informative lecture Dr.Vincent ....It's awesome!!....
35:50 Q: Are warts a mistake or byproduct too?
Please make a video about HBV reverse transcription
How is HCV causing liver cancer if it does not feature a DNA phase during its lifecycle?
Till now I was assuming that large T antigen directly binds to p53 and causes transformation...Now I learned molecular mechanism of Transformation by T antigen.!!!
Great work
Amazing content!!!
hi prof..can virus covid19,,,, tranmission via toothbrush
Thank you
I have a question. And I know the answer is I dont know. But if a person caught a virus from someone with a strong immune system, could the impact of the virus be say weaker than if that same person had caught the virus from someone with a weak immune system? Like, the hypothesis here is that the virus got the hell beat out of it from the person with the strong system, so the impact is diluted.
I thing that it would be the other way around because the virus would had been selected to prosper under harsher conditions.
You don't "beat up" a virus as if it was a unit. More like you kill some of it's children...who are clones. Therefore each child is the same virus (give or take some mutations here and there). That being said, if a stronger sick person doesn't cough or sneeze as much, you "might" catch less virus children from him vs. someone else coughs and sneezes everywhere. In this sense the environment will be "diluted" of the virus. But if you happen to wipe 100 virus units from either person's snot on your nose, the impact is exactly the same
thank you so much... for sharing these
Professor I agree to disagree nothings impossible
that lab must stink