NanoRooms
NanoRooms
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  • Просмотров 1 427 981
How our cells (nearly) perfected making nanobots
To try everything Brilliant has to offer-free-for a full 30 days, visit brilliant.org/NanoRooms. You’ll also get 20% off an annual premium subscription.
My Patreon: patreon.com/NanoRooms
Books & Papers:
Protein folding in tunnel
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28556777/#&gid=article-figures&pid=figure-1-uid-0
another paper with a folded protein in tunnel: www.cell.com/cell-reports/fulltext/S2211-1247(15)00855-4?_returnURL=https%3A%2F%2Flinkinghub.elsevier.com%2Fretrieve%2Fpii%2FS2211124715008554%3Fshowall%3Dtrue
other references can be found here: www.mdpi.com/2218-273X/10/1/97#B51-biomolecules-10-00097
one last example: www.rcsb.org/structure/5NP6
Hsp40’s buffering capacity: scholar.google.ca/citations?...
Просмотров: 42 323

Видео

An elegantly intuitive view of evolution
Просмотров 69 тыс.Месяц назад
To try everything Brilliant has to offer-free-for a full 30 days, visit brilliant.org/NanoRooms . You’ll also get 20% off an annual premium subscription. My Patreon: patreon.com/NanoRooms Books & Papers: www.cell.com/abstract/S0092-8674(16)31310-1?innerTabauthor-interview_mmc2 www.pnas.org/doi/abs/10.1073/pnas.93.7.2856?doi=10.1073/pnas.93.7.2856 www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5193110/ ww...
The Beauty of Life Through The Lens of Physics
Просмотров 228 тыс.3 месяца назад
To try everything Brilliant has to offer-free-for a full 30 days, visit brilliant.org/NanoRooms . You’ll also get 20% off an annual premium subscription. #molecular_dynamics Patreon: patreon.com/NanoRooms The BTS of the videos are here! Cited articles The main paper for this video Boonserm, P., Somsoros, W., Khunrae, P., Charupanit, K., Limsakul, P., & Sutthibutpong, T. (2024). Allosteric Signa...
How do cells come up with their programming language?
Просмотров 189 тыс.7 месяцев назад
To try everything Brilliant has to offer-free-for a full 30 days, visit brilliant.org/NanoRooms The first 200 of you will get 20% off Brilliant’s annual premium subscription. Cited articles The four hypothesis and their conclusion Noda-Garcia, L., Liebermeister, W., & Tawfik, D. S. (2018). Metabolite-enzyme coevolution: from single enzymes to metabolic pathways and networks. Annual Review of Bi...
The recursion formula behind life itself?
Просмотров 350 тыс.8 месяцев назад
This video was sponsored by Brilliant To try everything Brilliant has to offer-free-for a full 30 days, visit brilliant.org/NanoRooms The first 200 of you will get 20% off Brilliant’s annual premium subscription. cited articles: pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10383344/ www.researchgate.net/publication/286920623_Comprehensive_analysis_of_Hox_gene_expression_in_the_amphipod_crustacean_Parhyale_hawaiensi...
The Math Behind Building An AI Using DNA #SoME3
Просмотров 11 тыс.11 месяцев назад
This is an AI called a Neural Network. But all of the transistors and electronics are replaced with DNA, the molecule of life… all in one test tube. Papers used for this video DNA Neural Networks: www.nature.com/articles/s42256-022-00502-7 Computation Via DNA: www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-26709-6 DNA logic circuits: www.nature.com/articles/s41467-019-13980-y Matrices Using DNA: onlinelibr...
From Silicon to Cells: Full-Adder Circuits in Biological Computing
Просмотров 6 тыс.Год назад
Why even do this? Paper described in video: Ausländer, D., Ausländer, S., Pierrat, X. et al. Programmable full-adder computations in communicating three-dimensional cell cultures. Nat Methods 15, 57-60 (2018). doi.org/10.1038/nmeth.4505 Music City life - Artificial Music ruclips.net/video/caT3jZ0q6Z0/видео.html Pure Water by Meydän Link: ruclips.net/video/BU85yzb0nMU/видео.html Softwares used: ...
Hacking Bacteria Programming Using Control Theory & Math
Просмотров 30 тыс.Год назад
Why does a Bacteria come built in with a PID controller? Books: - An Introduction to Systems Biology Design Principles of Biological Circuits by Uri Alon - Chapter 9 Papers Cited: Alon et al., 1999: www.nature.com/articles/16483 Müller et al., 2021: pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acsami.1c20836 Music City life - Artificial Music ruclips.net/video/caT3jZ0q6Z0/видео.html Pure Water by Meydän Link: ...
The genius algorithm behind DNA error correction (TMEB #5)
Просмотров 7 тыс.Год назад
The Genius Algorithm Behind DNA Decoding Error Correction. Books: - An Introduction to Systems Biology Design Principles of Biological Circuits by Uri Alon - Chapter 7 Music City life - Artificial Music ruclips.net/video/caT3jZ0q6Z0/видео.html Good Start - Jingle Punks ruclips.net/video/NstTz8iyl-c/видео.html We’ll be right back ruclips.net/video/WBYdMrUd0w0/видео.html Green Screen ruclips.net/...
The math behind cell division (TMEB #4)
Просмотров 9 тыс.Год назад
The math behind the cell Papers - The main inspiration of this video: www.cell.com/fulltext/S0092-8674(11)00243-1 - Qualitative shape of cell division: www.cell.com/fulltext/S0092-8674(05)00599-4 - Removal of Cdc25: www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0092867487904582 - Modeling the heart using relaxation oscillators: www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378437104000433 Books: - An...
The Math Behind Evo Devo (TMEB #3)
Просмотров 116 тыс.Год назад
The math behind Evo-devo~ Uri Alon's Book: www.amazon.ca/Introduction-Systems-Biology-Principles-Biological/dp/1584886420 Jim Collins paper: www.researchgate.net/publication/12654725_Construction_of_a_Genetic_Toggle_Switch_in_Escherichia_coli www.nature.com/articles/s41467-017-01498-0 The math behind fly development: journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0021145 Music: City ...
Decoding nature’s masterful engineering using math (TMEB #2)
Просмотров 111 тыс.Год назад
Logic gates in biology can be set up to lead to timing important biological events. How is this done? edit: at 4:00, not all pathways make use of this motif. This is just one way timing can happen in biology Uri Alon's Book: www.amazon.ca/Introduction-Systems-Biology-Principles-Biological/dp/1584886420 Music: City Life - Artificial.Music (No Copyright Music) Link: www.youtube.com/watch?v=caT3j....
The Programming Language of Life? (TMEB #1)
Просмотров 119 тыс.Год назад
There is a deep root of mathematics within biology. How this came to be, you’ll have to watch the video to find out Books referenced: www.amazon.ca/Introduction-Systems-Biology-Principles-Biological/dp/1584886420 Music: City Life - Artificial.Music (No Copyright Music) Link: ruclips.net/video/caT3jZ0q6Z0/видео.html Pure Water by Meydän Link: ruclips.net/video/BU85yzb0nMU/видео.html Forever Sunr...
The Surprisingly Deep Connection of Math and Biology (TMEB #0)
Просмотров 37 тыс.Год назад
There is a deep root of mathematics within biology. How this came to be, you’ll have to watch the video to find out Biological oscillator: www.nature.com/articles/35002125 Biological Flash memory: www.nature.com/articles/35002131 Books referenced: www.amazon.ca/Introduction-Systems-Biology-Principles-Biological/dp/1584886420 Music: City Life - Artificial.Music (No Copyright Music) Link: ruclips...
How a Bacteria Colony Outwitted Computers By Evolving
Просмотров 13 тыс.Год назад
How in the world can living things become computers that outperform real computers? Article referenced in this video: Solving a Hamiltonian Path Problem with a bacterial computerjbioleng.biomedcentral.com › articles Learn more about biology’s Turing completeness: ruclips.net/video/Abbl8a-E-_Q/видео.html Turing machine photo: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turing_machine#/media/File:Model_of_a_Turing_mac...
Probability: The Heart of Chemistry #SoME2
Просмотров 20 тыс.Год назад
Probability: The Heart of Chemistry #SoME2
Why is Entropy Defined This Way?
Просмотров 2,3 тыс.2 года назад
Why is Entropy Defined This Way?
Entropy: The Most Essential Chemistry Concept
Просмотров 2,9 тыс.2 года назад
Entropy: The Most Essential Chemistry Concept
Why do we even need enthalpy?
Просмотров 3,3 тыс.2 года назад
Why do we even need enthalpy?
Using ideal gasses to teach an important science lesson | CHEM123 E04
Просмотров 6042 года назад
Using ideal gasses to teach an important science lesson | CHEM123 E04
Why you're learning thermodynamics in chemistry | CHEM 123 EP03
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.2 года назад
Why you're learning thermodynamics in chemistry | CHEM 123 EP03
Why aspirin pills aren't actually aspirin | Acids & Bases | CHEM123 02
Просмотров 1,5 тыс.2 года назад
Why aspirin pills aren't actually aspirin | Acids & Bases | CHEM123 02
Using chemical resonance to make drugs | CHEM123 01
Просмотров 3,9 тыс.2 года назад
Using chemical resonance to make drugs | CHEM123 01
I challenged myself to teach a freshman chem course | CHEM123 00
Просмотров 2,5 тыс.2 года назад
I challenged myself to teach a freshman chem course | CHEM123 00
Why do biologists need to know calculus?
Просмотров 12 тыс.2 года назад
Why do biologists need to know calculus?
The Logic of Biology
Просмотров 14 тыс.2 года назад
The Logic of Biology
Genetic Switch, but mathematical | Nanorooms Shorts
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.2 года назад
Genetic Switch, but mathematical | Nanorooms Shorts
The Elegance of Differential Equations (1.25x speed suggested) | Nanorooms E01 (3B1B SoME1)
Просмотров 16 тыс.2 года назад
The Elegance of Differential Equations (1.25x speed suggested) | Nanorooms E01 (3B1B SoME1)
Chemistry Revamped E03 | Nanobots part 2: Assembly & Biology
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.3 года назад
Chemistry Revamped E03 | Nanobots part 2: Assembly & Biology
Chemistry Revamped E02 | Nanobots part 1: Materials & Structure
Просмотров 3,3 тыс.4 года назад
Chemistry Revamped E02 | Nanobots part 1: Materials & Structure

Комментарии

  • @lesliecunliffe4450
    @lesliecunliffe4450 День назад

    Using psychological verbs (invent) in relationship to 'nature' is inappropriate. Nature does not have intentions.

  • @alsund1866
    @alsund1866 День назад

    I always thought that proteins each had only one way to fold but now hearing that they can accidently fold in so many other ways is really eye opening

  • @bradhilton2283
    @bradhilton2283 5 дней назад

    That is some very interesting stuff.

  • @hamzaabu-zaid2596
    @hamzaabu-zaid2596 7 дней назад

    AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAUG

  • @IB4UUB4ME
    @IB4UUB4ME 7 дней назад

    I’m sure that there won’t be any argue I g here over who is right and who is not, right people? 😂 😂🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️ Unfortunately they were perfect at one time, and will be again.

  • @hasanbey59
    @hasanbey59 8 дней назад

    We are the results of billions of mistakes! How brilliant!!??? Why don’t you spend some time examining the works of scientists like James Shapiro or Denis Noble instead of wasting your time with such fairytales

  • @jorgearango6108
    @jorgearango6108 9 дней назад

    Extraordinary

  • @eto38581
    @eto38581 10 дней назад

    I refuse to believe this is not by intelligent design. If you think about it deeply, the lines become blurry and it starts to make sense that evolution made it. But the same deep thinking causes genders to be blurry too. Many things get blurry when you overthink it.

  • @Dmadiroe
    @Dmadiroe 11 дней назад

    Great video, thank you.

  • @SamAlegria-tg4qu
    @SamAlegria-tg4qu 12 дней назад

    Great inteo video, thank you for this

  • @jpphoton
    @jpphoton 12 дней назад

    Excellent presentation and synopsis - clear and no fluff. Tanks

  • @jdkingsley6543
    @jdkingsley6543 13 дней назад

    It blows my mind that we can study something like this but cant solve some of humanities other issues. Like poverty- just amazing b

  • @Ousmanedembele811Tbos
    @Ousmanedembele811Tbos 13 дней назад

    This information makes me feel fragile. 😂

  • @peterwhite8424
    @peterwhite8424 15 дней назад

    Lego bricks arranged themselves more or less random and somehow our consciousness pops out in it

  • @LPesi-eh3qi
    @LPesi-eh3qi 16 дней назад

    Great video! I really would want to know what kind of study you did to gain this knowlodge, im a software development student, i hope to hear from you

  • @surfaceoftheoesj
    @surfaceoftheoesj 18 дней назад

    The world is discrete and information is communicated in binary

  • @surfaceoftheoesj
    @surfaceoftheoesj 18 дней назад

    Best channel on RUclips

  • @surfaceoftheoesj
    @surfaceoftheoesj 18 дней назад

    Loved it

  • @Clockworkbio
    @Clockworkbio 18 дней назад

    Such a sick setup for an AlphaFold video! Really excited to see what you’re building towards!

  • @Ascintony
    @Ascintony 18 дней назад

    Hey I have a question. If the hydrophobic regions of the proteins are on the inside, then how do membrane proteins have a hydrophobic outer region enabling then to be inserted in the lipid bilayer?

  • @carlosenriquegonzalez-isla6523
    @carlosenriquegonzalez-isla6523 18 дней назад

    Creationists can do this and they know it. That's why they hate us 😉

  • @elizabethwinsor-strumpetqueen
    @elizabethwinsor-strumpetqueen 18 дней назад

    Michael Levin is WAYYY ahead of you !

  • @sssssnake222
    @sssssnake222 19 дней назад

    Atomic dimensional life designed us.

  • @gianpaulgraziosi6171
    @gianpaulgraziosi6171 19 дней назад

    It’s called the immune system.

    • @peopleofearth6250
      @peopleofearth6250 19 дней назад

      Protein folding is foundational to the immune system, not the other way around.

  • @franciscomendoza754
    @franciscomendoza754 19 дней назад

    This is so cool, and so soooo interesting, but is too much for my little mind :c

  • @hamzacasdasdasd
    @hamzacasdasdasd 20 дней назад

    neture is the only think cleverly designed not by humans

  • @vinniepeterss
    @vinniepeterss 20 дней назад

    top notch

  • @vinniepeterss
    @vinniepeterss 20 дней назад

    ❤❤❤

  • @Jia-944
    @Jia-944 20 дней назад

    just out of curiosity , type of protein (intrinsic disoriented proteins) does not have a specific shape, is it possible to predict its structure😢

  • @Jia-944
    @Jia-944 20 дней назад

    Hi,I just want to say that your videos are soooooo amazing! ❤❤❤I am a high school student from china, I have long been wondering if using fundamental formulas like physic!! I really hope more people could know about this amazing topic therefore I am wondering if i could get your permission to share your videos on a Chinese video platform Bilibili, so more people would be able to access this amazing topic!!!😊❤

  • @Khashayarissi-ob4yj
    @Khashayarissi-ob4yj 20 дней назад

    With luck and more power of you.

  • @Alpha_GameDev-wq5cc
    @Alpha_GameDev-wq5cc 20 дней назад

    8:28 Oh My God get this professor out of the video… he can’t F-ing use a marker without constantly creating that unbearable squeaky noise. Literally unwatchable, I had a physically painful experience… Jesus christ

  • @fnnnn5986
    @fnnnn5986 20 дней назад

    Thank you DNA polymerase for keeping us alive

  • @mrjesuschrist2u
    @mrjesuschrist2u 20 дней назад

    10^30 possibility only takes millions of years? If you tried a new fold every second for 10^30 tries.....The protein folding problem is very interesting when it comes to origins of life on earth, time is a huge hurdle. For every 1 properly folded protein there are 10^77 non-functional(axe, 2010). Without DNA/RNA the possibility of folding into a functional protein is even worse. The math is not friendly if you appreciate the magnitude of the numbers.

    • @shannontaylor1849
      @shannontaylor1849 9 дней назад

      This has been explained ad nauseum. These substances have no goal, but they do have a filtered funnel to select for advantages. It's like hitting from the tee every stroke until one finally goes in vs hitting the 2nd shot from where the first shot landed, etc.

    • @Akazon
      @Akazon 5 дней назад

      Yeah but it even gets crazier that proteins somehow fold together in a specific way and RIGHT time to function What would be the odds?? I cant even wrap my mind around that

    • @shannontaylor1849
      @shannontaylor1849 5 дней назад

      @@Akazon The odds are 1 in 1. This has already been explained.

    • @mrjesuschrist2u
      @mrjesuschrist2u 4 дня назад

      @@shannontaylor1849 lmao where did you learn statistics? You tried to sound smart "explained ad nauseum" . Not only don't you understand the stats/maths but you don't understand the chem/bio complexity. Flipping a coins, rolling dice or shuffling a deck of cards, it doesn't have a goal and even if you got partially correct outcomes the products aren't stable so you don't get to keep the parts of the product you like and build off it. The protein problem and cellular development in general suffer from this irreducible complexity. You hit from the tee in new random direction Everytime. You role the 20 sided dice Everytime. You flip all 150 coins at once Everytime. That's just to make 1 protein and you need multiple proteins at once. The conditions on early earth were hostile, the swing, flip, or roll may be your only shot. Imagine golfing while drunk and blind folded. You can have as many swings as you want once you get out of the gold cart. You put a lot of faith in this "filtered funnel" lol

    • @mrjesuschrist2u
      @mrjesuschrist2u 4 дня назад

      @@shannontaylor1849 1 in 1 is 100% .... You meant 1 to 1 (or 1:1) which is 50/50 lol. That's if you did one factor at a time and they only had 2 possibly outcomes, neither of which is accurate or useful in this scenario.

  • @bataalexander9703
    @bataalexander9703 20 дней назад

    If a protein is prone to misfolding, then perhaps its primary structure is not optimal, there has to be a better one.

  • @tom-hy1kn
    @tom-hy1kn 20 дней назад

    But who made our cells?

  • @No2AI
    @No2AI 21 день назад

    Advanced Chemistry machines …. That is all we are .

  • @Amino_Domado
    @Amino_Domado 21 день назад

    I love this. I'm studying molecular biology and I've always been interested in applying mathematical concepts in my field.

  • @br3nto
    @br3nto 21 день назад

    Wow. It really does seem like a 3D version of a Turing machine at multiple scales. First at the DNA scale, then at the protein chain scale with the alphabet being the different forces. That’s pretty cool. Then at the level of the completed proteins, etc etc etc.

    • @johnnuaxon3
      @johnnuaxon3 20 дней назад

      Holographic principle tells that information is encoded in 2d and 3d is a hologram

  • @amelieschreiber6502
    @amelieschreiber6502 21 день назад

    At about 2:45 you mention that there is only one correct conformation for any given protein. There are about 1%-4% of proteins with multiple metastable conformations. These are called metamorphic proteins, or sometimes "fold-switchers". This is why AI models like Distributional Graphormer exist, to sample the Boltzmann distribution.

  • @pyropulseIXXI
    @pyropulseIXXI 21 день назад

    My major was physics but I took many major level biology courses because I was interested in it. It seems to me that protein folding and all this stuff is just a model that happens to explain things satisfactorily to a human mind. We have a disease that we say is caused by misfolded proteins. We have a drug that ‘treats’ this disease, so we say that the drug is helping the proteins to fold correctly. But how do we actually know all this? We don’t (since we cannot observe it, only pseudo-observe it); it is just a model we use, but this model may not have any relation to the actual truth of what is actually going on. Beyond that, it is likely not even possible to know for sure what is going on, so a model that gives sufficient explanatory power is all that we can hope for. But there are infinite models that could work on doing this job, so why did we pick the one we are correctly using? It is because that is the path humans happened to go down, and we build off prior work, so we keep building an ever increasingly complicated edifice. It is like this in physics, too, but many don’t like to admit it. They claim we are discovering actual truths rather than just constructing a model that happens to work, a model that is just one of many. But we cannot probe those other models because it takes the effort of thousands upon thousands of humans all building off each others work. For instance, we claim the higgs bosom was ‘discovered,’ but what was actually seen? Just a small blip/deviation on a graph that has nothing to do with any actual observations of particles (because such observations are impossible). With a complicated mathematical framework and statistics, we can say the model that uses higgs bosons ‘predicated’ such a blip would occur, therefore the higgs boson exists. But there are an infinite number of mathematical models that can generate such a blip, thereby ‘predicting’ whatever we want via the injection of an explanation that is attached to the predictive model. Science claims to be empirical, but it isn’t entirely (and isn’t mostly). It is far more in the depths of rationalism, using 1% of ‘observations’ to claim stuff exists we never observed, just because our rationalism-generated model has a blip, and we observe a blip, therefore this thing we never saw, but attached to the blip via our model, exists. It is like this in molecular biology. I can observe the projectile motion of a baseball; I cannot observe anything on a molecular scale. It is all just rationalism, where 99% of stuff we believe in isn’t ever observed. But we observe something that our model attaches to the thing we cannot observe, and then we claim the thing we cannot observe has been observed (via the model) and that it therefore exists. Same with these proteins and protein folding, and drug interactions. We cannot observe how drugs actually work, so it is just a story we tell ourselves of how it works. If we could actually observe such interactions, we’d know how all drugs work, just as easily as observing someone throwing a ball, or how a mechanical watch works (actually observe it, not pseudo-observe it). But since we can’t, we don’t know how anesthesia works…. until we create a model that explains it, then we claim to know how it works (when we don’t; we just know how the model works). The model is not reality, so don’t confuse the model for reality.

    • @98danielray
      @98danielray 20 дней назад

      good job rediscovering philosophy of science

  • @kacemtoubal3580
    @kacemtoubal3580 21 день назад

    Hello everyone, It's been a long time since I've been on NanoRooms, I hope you are doing well, and I really hope to reveal the mystery of my question: How do our cells know that a specific protein has mutated? I appreciate your effort and time in making those videos, it is magnificent work. Thanks for everything!

    • @coldmossonarock7743
      @coldmossonarock7743 10 дней назад

      If an aminoacid is replaced by an incorrect one during translation, even if on the catalytic site. The cell doesnt usually cares, for it makes hundreds of proteins per hour. It is always on the DNA level where it is always looking for and correcting missmatches and various types of mutations (even having different enzymes for different mutations types). As for how does the cell does that, it really depends on what caused the mutation and what effect it had on the DNA.

  • @noelbreitenbach8673
    @noelbreitenbach8673 21 день назад

    This channel is very awesome 😎

  • @AmruMagdy
    @AmruMagdy 21 день назад

    ارتبط صوت اللواء فايز الدويري بنصر السابع من أكتوبر ربنا لا يحرمنا من صوتك

  • @OzGoober
    @OzGoober 21 день назад

    Great work!

  • @Valgween
    @Valgween 21 день назад

    2:48 laughs in intrinsically disordered proteins.

  • @user-cu9ww9tj4i
    @user-cu9ww9tj4i 21 день назад

    Westworld

  • @gleb7186
    @gleb7186 21 день назад

    Do we know why some misfolded proteins causing other proteins to do the same (like in mad cow disease)? At least a theory?

    • @cjdabes
      @cjdabes 20 дней назад

      An example of this, as you mentioned with Mad Cow, are prions. Some misfolded proteins induce misfolding in other normally folded proteins because many proteins in cells homomultimerize to some extent - this refers to when multiple copies of the same protein interact with one another to form a multi-unit complex. An example of this would be the Spike on the surface of SARS-CoV-2, which is a homotrimer (3 copies of the Spike protein bound together). Proteins multimerize like this because certain amino acids on an interface of the protein are compatible with amino acids on the surface of other copies, enabling them to interact. In the case of the human prion protein (PrP), the normal fold has a series of alpha-helices formed by the amino acid series; however, when misfolded into a prion form, many of these helices become beta-strands that form a sort of solenoid structure. Both ends of this solenoid structure likely serve as points at which more proteins can be induced to misfold, ultimately leading to polymerization of proteins at these ends that form cytotoxic fibrils in neurons. Here is a short article about prion structures from Virology Blog, if you'd like to read more. virology.ws/2016/09/15/structure-of-an-infectious-prion/ As to the exact mechanistic underpinnings of how the prion induces misfolding of normally folded proteins, I'm not sure that's been uncovered in detail yet. Hope that helps.

  • @AlanZucconi
    @AlanZucconi 21 день назад

    Thank you for making this, I really enjoyed it! 🧬 Can I ask which software did you use to render and animate the proteins?

  • @Duggleftforthemilk
    @Duggleftforthemilk 21 день назад

    This is proof of the Lord's Design.