small part of lecture is wrong, two sister chromatids are exactly same and this is why we consider each centeromere as one chromosome even when it is on the one chromatid strain. In fact, pair chromosomes are 2 different chromosomes (each one has one centromere) that come from two parents.
yes I agree even when he talks about haploid and diploid they have both 2n = 4 and it's wrong ! the diploid cell must have 4 chromosomes while the haploid cell has just 2 chromosomes
7:03 might help as a time stamp, as this is the first time he goes wrong, as far as I can tell. When he points to the left part of the chromosome, that would rather be sister chromatid number 1. When he points to the right half of the chromosome, that is sister chromatid number 2. Both chromatids are identical copies of one another (made during mitosis for instance). These two halves are not however from two different parents.
I wish I could have watched all these videos when I was a Biology major. I bet my GPA would be a 3.4 instead of a 2.9. Your conviction and clarification of these topics are impressive sir!
Great explanation of the relationship between DNA, Chromatin, and Chromosomes.. I did not realize they were all the same thing - - just different coil levels...
Hello, thanks for your great lectures! At 6:40 you said that one chromosome comes from the mother while the other comes from the father. However it looks like that the representation of the chromosome in the board is a single duplicate chromose with two sister chromatides. Am I right? Is it possibile, naturally, two homologus chromosomes (one from the father and other from the mother) joined by a centromere? Thanks.
Wow amazing .every time I got confused about any thing in bio chemistry just listen to ur videos that confustion absolutely goes away .may god bless u &award u PROF 😍😍😍
Unfortunately some aspects of this lecture are wrong. This channel is still my favorite overall for studying science. Every educational channel I have looked at has an error once in awhile, nobody's perfect.
can you differentiate homologous chromosome and sister chromatid.i think you are calling chromatid as homologous chromosome.may be I m wrong please clear my confusion.otherwise it was really helpfull and I m your big fan.
Sir, I think that the DNA molecule is not wrapped around individual histones(H-2A, H-2B, H-3 and H-4) in a nucleosome. But instead it is wrapped around the core which is made of the above histones.
Thank you for your great job, I really do appreciate your channel. But I must give reason to some people below: "small part of lecture is wrong, two sister chromatids are exactly same..." @Sina Nouraei Further more the two sister chromatids of one prophase chromosome are the product of the semiconservative Replikation of one DNA Molecule which occurs during the S-Phase of the cell cycle. Do you agree with me? Have you ever consider to change the picture behind you? The "haploid" cell on the right isn't the haploid counterpart of the cell on the left. This cell is diploid - if we consider the two cells of the same exemplary organism - The cell on the right seams much more to be one of the daughter cells of the cell on the left after mitosis. or?
Ur lectures are amazing... I am confused though now. Whenever its in x shape, it should be 2 sister chromatids, meaning its an exact copy ,, meaning its already passed the S stage where each chromatide is copied and then paired using a centromere? Is it!!
I had one question, the two chromosomes joined together through the centromere is called homologous chromosomes in this lecture; but in the next lecture (Cell cycle and interphase), you called them sister chromatids. which one is correct? Im very confused, I need answer please....
Could you please clear up the sister chromatid, chromosome thing? Feel like you got it wrong in the video and have confused a lot of people including me.
During cell division, a chromosome basically replicates its information thus creating two sister chromatids that are conjoined by a centromere. When it comes to chromosomes, in a homologous pair, one comes from the mother while the other one - from the father.
I think that chromosomes are counted by number of centromeres. So here we have one chromosome with two chromatids. But you are equating one chromatid with one chromosome. I need clarification
In a homologous pair of chromosomes, one comes from the mom and the other from the dad. So is each chromosome in the pair made of a different DNA molecule (one from the mom and one from the dad)? Might be a dumb question but I am trying to self-learn genetics as I haven't taken the course yet :/
Question about maternal and paternal chromosomes - in the diagram of the chromosome you pointed out that one was from the maternal and the other from the paternal. I thought that there was two homologous pairs and that the diagram you presented is one of them. I understood that the chromosomes are as you displayed on the whiteboard during replication and the the two parts are the sister chromatids. Could you please explain for me or maybe link me to a video that explains. I am learning about this for my job. Thank you so very much. LA
Sister chromatids are not from different parents..its the 2 chromosomes of the homologous pair that are from different parents and have different genes
I love biology but I ain't in biology class stuck in physical science its alright but I love DNA and RNA it's fascinating. Now i am planning on a expirement but i only know one. But i want to know another expirement to preform.
If I keep thanking God until tomorrow because I found you, it will not be enough ... I prefer not to praise anyone until I make sure that he really deserves it but you always prove yourself worthily, I do not know whether you have a mind in your head or an encyclopedia because I always search for different topics and watch a lot of videos but Surprised that you have explained it too, and in fact, almost these videos Consider as a waste of time in front of your videos,…I am not sure what is the reason that does not make you much more famous!
i m confused here you said single chromosome is two chromatids each from different parent. isn t the homologous chromosomes that are each from each parent and that a single chromosome is duplicated chromatid from the same parent.?
Yes, you are correct. In each pair of homologous chromosomes, one comes from the mother and the other one - from the father. Chromatids are just a copy of each chromosome that is created and used during cell division.
Just watched this video and that chromosome your showing on the left is a single chromosome after replicating it's DNA. Those are sister chromatids connected at the centromere, not two separate chromosomes. Also, the two cells on the right your showing as haploid and diploid have the same number of chromosomes, the only difference is that the cell on the left has replicated it's DNA, thus has completed S phase of the cell cycle, and the cell on the right has not yet replicated it's DNA, thus has not yet entered S phase of the cell cycle. So in the case above both cells on the right have the same number of chromosomes.
While your videos are 99.9% awesome and I can never acquire as mich knowledge as you, I believe that you've made a mistake with regards to what a homologous chromosome means and what a diploid and haploid chromosome mean.
:eerrrr.... problem (7'10'') a chromosome is all the "X form", not only the half ! The half is a chromatid and the other is a copy of it (the exact copy of the other except in some cases like the crossing over...). One chromosome of the pair is inherited from the father and the other (the over X composed also of two chromatids) is inherited from the mother. Warning.
Hell yeah man. You're almost single-handedly getting me through my bio/nursing majors.
small part of lecture is wrong, two sister chromatids are exactly same and this is why we consider each centeromere as one chromosome even when it is on the one chromatid strain. In fact, pair chromosomes are 2 different chromosomes (each one has one centromere) that come from two parents.
yes I agree even when he talks about haploid and diploid they have both 2n = 4 and it's wrong ! the diploid cell must have 4 chromosomes while the haploid cell has just 2 chromosomes
Actually a diploid cell has 2pairs of each chromosome and a haploid contains only one of the of each chromosomes
Thank you. That perplexed me as I got another information from different sources.
Some portion of lecture is wrong.
7:03 might help as a time stamp, as this is the first time he goes wrong, as far as I can tell.
When he points to the left part of the chromosome, that would rather be sister chromatid number 1. When he points to the right half of the chromosome, that is sister chromatid number 2. Both chromatids are identical copies of one another (made during mitosis for instance). These two halves are not however from two different parents.
I wish I could have watched all these videos when I was a Biology major. I bet my GPA would be a 3.4 instead of a 2.9. Your conviction and clarification of these topics are impressive sir!
I'm so glad I stumbled upon these videos... Thanks!
YOU'RE THE G.O.A.T AND THE REASON I UNDERSTAND ANYTHING IN BIO THANK YOU!!!
way better than my genetics professor. thank you so much! youre amazing.
Great explanation of the relationship between DNA, Chromatin, and Chromosomes.. I did not realize they were all the same thing - - just different coil levels...
You are so amazing! Thank you for this, keep doing what you do!!
The way he delivered his lectures are amazing..save my biochemistry exams
Best online Lectures on youtube in my opinion! Keep it up!
For me RUclips is ak lecture. Lots and lots of wishes for you Andy. :)
wooooow this guy is crazy clever he also does chem
Loving the videos so far , Thank you ! :)
I'm so happy for this lectures, thank you sooo much!!!
This guy is a great teacher
best teacher i have ever seen
Your Videos Really Helps Me A Lot
Thank You
thanks for sharing us your knowledge... i learned a lots from your videos
i love ypur manner!! of explain biology!!!
Hello,
thanks for your great lectures!
At 6:40 you said that one chromosome comes from the mother while the other comes from the father. However it looks like that the representation of the chromosome in the board is a single duplicate chromose with two sister chromatides. Am I right?
Is it possibile, naturally, two homologus chromosomes (one from the father and other from the mother) joined by a centromere?
Thanks.
Obsessed with his accent
one of my top 2 favorite bio teachers
Sir you're the best teacher, a true science pedagogy. You're lectures are short yet very well explained
Respect & love from India🇮🇳🇮🇳
Awesome ... learned so much!
Excellent Explanation. Thank you!!
you are of great help for my medicine admission test, some things about miosis just were very hard to understand
Wow amazing .every time I got confused about any thing in bio chemistry just listen to ur videos that confustion absolutely goes away .may god bless u &award u
PROF 😍😍😍
you are very beautiful 😁
Unfortunately some aspects of this lecture are wrong.
This channel is still my favorite overall for studying science. Every educational channel I have looked at has an error once in awhile, nobody's perfect.
Brilliant!, I’ve subscribed
can you differentiate homologous chromosome and sister chromatid.i think you are calling chromatid as homologous chromosome.may be I m wrong please clear my confusion.otherwise it was really helpfull and I m your big fan.
Sir, I think that the DNA molecule is not wrapped around individual histones(H-2A, H-2B, H-3 and H-4) in a nucleosome. But instead it is wrapped around the core which is made of the above histones.
the GOAT of MCAT prep does it again! haha
These lectures are really useful ....thank u..
in love with your lectures
DNA doesn't wrap around one histone , it wrap around octamer , isn't it ? Thank you for this helpfull lecture .
Yes you're right
Andrey the drawings of diploid and haploid cells are wrong.
Thank you
Why do we need protein to wrap around the double helix DNA molecule and to form centromere?
amazing videos. thanks a lot sir
-love from india
Professor Andrey please could you show me where the genes fit into the picture?
such an amazing lecture sir!!!
Sir you amazing... I'm from Tripura (India)
you saved my semester
Thank you for your great job, I really do appreciate your channel.
But I must give reason to some people below: "small part of lecture is wrong, two sister chromatids are exactly same..." @Sina Nouraei Further more the two sister chromatids of one prophase chromosome are the product of the semiconservative Replikation of one DNA Molecule which occurs during the S-Phase of the cell cycle. Do you agree with me?
Have you ever consider to change the picture behind you? The "haploid" cell on the right isn't the haploid counterpart of the cell on the left. This cell is diploid - if we consider the two cells of the same exemplary organism -
The cell on the right seams much more to be one of the daughter cells of the cell on the left after mitosis. or?
How do you can explain all the subjects of so many areas? congrats
I got a question so 1 chromosome contains 2 different DNA molecule ?
Ur lectures are amazing...
I am confused though now. Whenever its in x shape, it should be 2 sister chromatids, meaning its an exact copy ,, meaning its already passed the S stage where each chromatide is copied and then paired using a centromere? Is it!!
+Mo Faraz yes... thanx Mo
You're amazing.
Thank you about these information
you're the goat
I think there is an error in your lecture, centromer binds two chromatid which both of them identical not mix from father and mother
Very very very well explained thank you sir
very clear explanation
I had one question, the two chromosomes joined together through the centromere is called homologous chromosomes in this lecture; but in the next lecture (Cell cycle and interphase), you called them sister chromatids. which one is correct? Im very confused, I need answer please....
No, 2 chromosomes joined together through centromere are not homologous but are sister chromatids
you are incredible really thank u u r awsome
amazing explanation
Sir your lecture are very helpful
You have cleared my doubt tqqq sir
What playlist is that part of? Thank you
Where do Chromatids fit in? Could anyone help me?
Could you please clear up the sister chromatid, chromosome thing? Feel like you got it wrong in the video and have confused a lot of people including me.
Exactly
During cell division, a chromosome basically replicates its information thus creating two sister chromatids that are conjoined by a centromere. When it comes to chromosomes, in a homologous pair, one comes from the mother while the other one - from the father.
Yes. It's a pity they didn't corrent it. I started this course and now I am not sure whether to trust it or not.
This videos are helpful. Thanks
+samuel muma you're welcome!
I think that chromosomes are counted by number of centromeres. So here we have one chromosome with two chromatids. But you are equating one chromatid with one chromosome. I need clarification
In a homologous pair of chromosomes, one comes from the mom and the other from the dad. So is each chromosome in the pair made of a different DNA molecule (one from the mom and one from the dad)? Might be a dumb question but I am trying to self-learn genetics as I haven't taken the course yet :/
yes
i have my biology finals today doing a complete marathon or your videos #mylastdaywithbiology.
btw this makes me sad.
Very nice.👌👏👍..thanks sir.
☺☺☺ ...
Thanks
Sir,i trust your videos so whenever you make a mistake try to make it right by commenting or explaining the correction in the description.
Why does the chromosome condense during meiosis?
Question about maternal and paternal chromosomes - in the diagram of the chromosome you pointed out that one was from the maternal and the other from the paternal. I thought that there was two homologous pairs and that the diagram you presented is one of them. I understood that the chromosomes are as you displayed on the whiteboard during replication and the the two parts are the sister chromatids. Could you please explain for me or maybe link me to a video that explains. I am learning about this for my job. Thank you so very much. LA
Sister chromatids are not from different parents..its the 2 chromosomes of the homologous pair that are from different parents and have different genes
Do you have a video on polytene chromosomes? :)
Please tell me about the reference of this vidio
I love biology but I ain't in biology class stuck in physical science its alright but I love DNA and RNA it's fascinating. Now i am planning on a expirement but i only know one. But i want to know another expirement to preform.
It's quite Confusing My Knowledge
...sister Chromatids r from 2 different parents ? ?
Thank so for your time.
Thanks so much for your time.
If I keep thanking God until tomorrow because I found you, it will not be enough ... I prefer not to praise anyone until I make sure that he really deserves it but you always prove yourself worthily, I do not know whether you have a mind in your head or an encyclopedia because I always search for different topics and watch a lot of videos but Surprised that you have explained it too, and in fact, almost these videos Consider as a waste of time in front of your videos,…I am not sure what is the reason that does not make you much more famous!
Thank you
n loads of good wishes for you from india
very good explanation (y)
i m confused here you said single chromosome is two chromatids each from different parent. isn t the homologous chromosomes that are each from each parent and that a single chromosome is duplicated chromatid from the same parent.?
Yes, you are correct. In each pair of homologous chromosomes, one comes from the mother and the other one - from the father. Chromatids are just a copy of each chromosome that is created and used during cell division.
You’re wrong about histones ... The dna coil around 8 histones not each histone
has increase my dimensions continue ...
Just watched this video and that chromosome your showing on the left is a single chromosome after replicating it's DNA. Those are sister chromatids connected at the centromere, not two separate chromosomes. Also, the two cells on the right your showing as haploid and diploid have the same number of chromosomes, the only difference is that the cell on the left has replicated it's DNA, thus has completed S phase of the cell cycle, and the cell on the right has not yet replicated it's DNA, thus has not yet entered S phase of the cell cycle. So in the case above both cells on the right have the same number of chromosomes.
grand salute fr dis😘😘
you remind me of sheldon copper somehow
While your videos are 99.9% awesome and I can never acquire as mich knowledge as you, I believe that you've made a mistake with regards to what a homologous chromosome means and what a diploid and haploid chromosome mean.
Please provide pdf too
why does he call one chromatid of a chromosome an individual chromosome?
I think he is wrong here
#abmebiosciences Chromosome consist of two chromatids
But only during division, right?
Do u teach in college? ...
Yet again, Andrey to the rescue.
Oh my God, I am studying this now in school and I would like to travel to Mars or hope that a meteorite will fall to Earth.
thanx
Boston, Jersey, or New York?
New York :)
ure thaa best
Nice
:eerrrr.... problem (7'10'') a chromosome is all the "X form", not only the half ! The half is a chromatid and the other is a copy of it (the exact copy of the other except in some cases like the crossing over...). One chromosome of the pair is inherited from the father and the other (the over X composed also of two chromatids) is inherited from the mother. Warning.
الرجاء الترجمه للعربيه
Homologous chromosomes≠sister chromatids
if ii hear basically one more time
Warning...this lecture has to be corrected!!
Marry me
+Jasmine Thorson :-)
Lmao, This is AK's way of saying no politely... Trust me im from NY as well :)... haha
does he ?? hhhhhh ater 2 years of the comment ?