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Sir William Dunn School of Pathology
Великобритания
Добавлен 6 авг 2015
Introduction to virology iCase
Dr. Kenny Moore introduces the virology iCase, an online self-study program for students at the University of Oxford.
Просмотров: 2 206
Видео
The FHS Program - General info
Просмотров 1213 года назад
Prof Quentin Sattentau explain the Final Honours School (FHS) program of the University of Oxford
The FHS Project - How to choose a project
Просмотров 493 года назад
Prof Quentin Sattentau talks about the project that is part of the Final Honours School (FHS) program. Here he discusses how students can choose a project.
The FHS Project - Assessement and expectations
Просмотров 513 года назад
Prof Quentin Sattentau talks about the project that is part of the Final Honours School (FHS) program. Here he discusses how projects are evaluated and what is expected of students.
The FHS Project - Scope and objectives
Просмотров 293 года назад
Prof Quentin Sattentau talks about the project that is part of the Final Honours School (FHS) program. Here he discusses the scope of an FHS project and the objectives.
Conformational changes in influenza virus RNA polymerase
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.8 лет назад
Morph between the structure of the apo form of the influenza C virus RNA polymerase (pdb 5D98) and that of promoter-bound influenza A virus RNA polymerase (4WSB).
FHS Project bacterial pathogens
Просмотров 2468 лет назад
Grace Barnes and Sacha Burgess talk about their FHS project at the Sir William Dunn School.
FHS Project macrophages
Просмотров 1458 лет назад
Max Brodermann talks about his FHS project in the Greaves lab. For more information about the FHS program and FHS projects in the Sir William Dunn School visit: www.path.ox.ac.uk/content/undergraduate-teaching
FHS Project Gambia
Просмотров 1008 лет назад
Thomas Handley talks about his FHS project on malaria at the MRC Gambia.
The Enzyme-linked Immunosorbent Assay - ELISA
Просмотров 6 тыс.8 лет назад
Dr Rebecca Moore explains the principles of the Enzyme-linked Immunosorbent Assay and how it is performed in the lab.
The HA inhibition assay
Просмотров 57 тыс.8 лет назад
Prof. William James explains the principles of the Haemagglutination Inhibitation assa.
The Haemagglutination assay
Просмотров 74 тыс.8 лет назад
Prof. William James explains how the Haemagglutination assay can be used to measure the influenza A virus titre in a sample.
The Polymerase Chain Reaction
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.8 лет назад
Dr Kenny Moore explains the principles of the Polymerase Chain Reaction and how it can be used to quantify DNA and RNA from cells and viruses.
Safe practice in bacteriology
Просмотров 909 лет назад
How to handle bacteria samples safely and dispose of contaminated samples correctly. This video is part of the Principles of Pathology course at the University of Oxford.
This is very clear. Thank you!
Wow
Very nice sir
ruclips.net/video/gn0B1FRVpgk/видео.htmlsi=iMdLVue8nYkU4t8i
well helpful indeed. thank you
The sound of the videos is not good
Great video thank you❤️❤️
What happens if you go over 50 cycles. Can you go into the hundreds of cycles?
Is there a virologist here willing to debate.
Thank you for the succinct explanation.
Does the number of infectious virons change after calculation
Does this mean that you have to estimate the viral concentration that you would add to each specimen? The reason why I ask this is because I am wondering if there is a certain viral load that someone could be exposed to which the typical immune titer would not be able to defend against.
For example does exposure to a larger number of viral particles mean that you have a lower chance of your specific titre protecting you from infection?
Can u provide more detail please, and is there any use of lectin here 🙏pls tell!
i dont understand the calculation at the end can somebody explain it how do we find the titre
from what i understand titer is the last responsive tube, so if you have five tubes where dilution is 1:2 the subsequent tubes will be T2-1:4, T3-1:8, T4-1:16, T5- 1:32, I am taking the second number and multiplying by two to get the titer in this case, so if t3 is my last responsive tube my titer would be 8, let me know if this helps
Great explanation !
you talk too fast
Virus glyoproteins that enable hemagglutination. Influenza H perhaps? Thanks for the video. 😊
That was the first source I found (after good half an hour of looking) that explained it to me clearly. Thank you so much, it's really helpful!
Thankyou sir
Really helpful video Prof. William..Thanks a tonne!
Great job! Thank you!
Are you a virologist.
very well explained Sir!! Absolutely magnificient:)
how do you fix sir? PFA 10% or 4% is not discussed.
spaghetti
Thanks sir nice information
Thank you, sir. This was very helpful.
Nice sir
You safed my day bro. Very good and fast explanation.
saved*
you're pretty sexy
this is lit fam
:)
Thank you
damn he cute af
Gay
hi can you explain please how FFU works (focus forming units)
Hi, well, the setup of Focus Forming Assay is similar to the plaque assay. It is different in that the incubation is shorter (so it gets you results faster) and that the sites of virus infection are detected by immunostaining (so with fluorescent antibodies). This makes it particularly useful for viruses that do not lyse cells. The downside is that fluorescent antibodies can be expensive and that you need a microscope with the right illumination to see/count the sites of infection. Hope that answers your question!
ya It helps a lot, thank you so much :)
At 2:25 did he mean: "Ability to neutralize that particular antigen" ? It's the antibodies in the serum that neutralize the virus..
Yes, that is correct.
Sir William Dunn School of Pathology okay, thanks for the answer and for the video! Really helpful.
wow its amazing channel
Thank you !