This is How Your Body Makes New Cells

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  • Опубликовано: 27 янв 2025

Комментарии •

  • @Corporis
    @Corporis 4 года назад +79

    It has been a pleasure hosting and writing this season y’all. Thanks for watching, and stay safe!

  • @myatminn5660
    @myatminn5660 4 года назад +74

    Mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell:)

  • @Razes92
    @Razes92 4 года назад +24

    This the last episode of this season??!! Hope the new season start soon, I really enjoy this series

  • @rohannazir7739
    @rohannazir7739 4 года назад +109

    if only my teachers taught it like this - Molecular biologist here 😅

    • @campkira
      @campkira 4 года назад

      yeah...

    • @miguelteixeira1158
      @miguelteixeira1158 4 года назад +6

      I'm an 11th grade student and here in Portugal we are taught almost exactly like this. The IPSC's even came in a national exam, not many years ago

    • @alexgewecke9576
      @alexgewecke9576 4 года назад +2

      Did you also just graduate with a molecular biology BS? Finding a job is going to be hard.

    • @pixeldesigns5333
      @pixeldesigns5333 4 года назад +1

      so you're a molecular biologist?
      name every one of the trillions of molecules in the human body

    • @ebyeapen4593
      @ebyeapen4593 4 года назад

      @@pixeldesigns5333lol now that just make you even dummer

  • @MrMowfow
    @MrMowfow 4 года назад +14

    Thank you Seeker for another great series, loving all of your content at the moment! :D This series has a good balance of key information and simplicity. Hopefully, there's a second one!?

  • @Vivaswaan.
    @Vivaswaan. 4 года назад +3

    Voting for another installment of this series.
    All the videos were great, to say the least. Learned so much. So much resourceful information compiled in each episode. Loved the presentation and narration; interesting writing. Commend the use of graphics/photos, short clips and all the visual aid; just marvellous, superb. Always wondered why things were not taught like this in colleges using these visual aids.
    Please accept my warmest gratitude, can't thank you all enough. I am extremely grateful to Dr Patrick too. I sincerely wish you were my professor.

  • @naveenraj2008eee
    @naveenraj2008eee 4 года назад +14

    Hi seeker
    Another interesting video..
    Learned a lot..
    Great season..
    Hope another season comes soon..
    Thanks patrick and seeker team..🙏👍

  • @VinodChauhan-mn1wp
    @VinodChauhan-mn1wp 5 месяцев назад

    The concept of Hidden DNA Potential on Shirlest is mind-blowing. It opened my eyes to things I never considered before. Highly recommend diving into it!

  • @sebastianelytron8450
    @sebastianelytron8450 4 года назад +48

    What did one dividing cell say to its sibling when it stepped on its foot?
    Mitosis!

    • @truetech4158
      @truetech4158 4 года назад +5

      Isn't that how plantar warts can effectively spread it's cells? What about if it was done with an athlete's foot?
      You put your plantars wart in you put your athletes foot out, you wipe your toe jam off and then you flick it all about. That's what it's all about, or aboot if yer a canadian eh? Sorry, guess i went one step over the line there. Hey, we gotta get our kicks somehow! lol
      Giant steps are what you take, walking on the escalator~.

    • @FahmiNoorFiqri
      @FahmiNoorFiqri 4 года назад +5

      Nice one dude

    • @earthterra8546
      @earthterra8546 4 года назад +2

      That's a good one

    • @niggy.
      @niggy. 4 года назад +1

      ohhhhhh

    • @purplegirl6176
      @purplegirl6176 4 года назад +1

      Nice

  • @101cartoonstreet3
    @101cartoonstreet3 4 года назад +2

    I learn more from seeker than I learn at school

  • @onnalalatha7888
    @onnalalatha7888 5 месяцев назад

    The insights on Hidden DNA Potential on Shirlest have inspired me to strive for more. It’s fascinating how much we can grow when we understand this better.

  • @SadiqTasleem
    @SadiqTasleem 4 года назад +2

    This research should be funded and should be made more popular

  • @EverythingScience
    @EverythingScience 4 года назад +17

    When you accidentally wake up at 5 am, moments before seeker posts.
    I knew there was a god...

    • @truetech4158
      @truetech4158 4 года назад +2

      Ha! If you were actually about everything science, then what's with that junk-$cience reference in the 2nd sentence you came up with huh?
      If there was a god, religion$ wouldn't be cashing in on mythology. Pandemics and war$ don't really produce any afterlives, even if trumpstein and The Church Mafia with their pedo victim's hushmoney fund padded up with donations from delusional enablers wishes to suggest otherwise. Not even the suicides due to pedo victims trying to escape the ongoing abuse produce any real afterlives. Hey, do you like enabled fraud, or didn't realize that you enable it?

    • @EverythingScience
      @EverythingScience 4 года назад +2

      I didn't know jokes were suddenly illegal...

    • @user-ti3ri2nj3w
      @user-ti3ri2nj3w 4 года назад

      I knew this was coming these freaking athiests

  • @h7opolo
    @h7opolo 4 года назад +4

    super interesting. thank you for the graphics and thorough explanation.

  • @lohadirammeena3688
    @lohadirammeena3688 5 месяцев назад

    I just finished reading about Hidden DNA Potential related to shirlest, and I feel energized and inspired! It's an enlightening journey you won’t want to miss.

  • @TheFinktron
    @TheFinktron 4 года назад +2

    Wish I would have had your excellent series when I was teaching biology in high school. You give very clear explanations that a teacher can build on to make biology much more interesting. Keep up the excellent work that you do.

  • @pigmentrich224
    @pigmentrich224 4 года назад +1

    Laws create order
    Order create structure
    Structure create functionality
    Functionality create purpose
    Purpose create motivation

  • @mahmoudsaeed4817
    @mahmoudsaeed4817 3 года назад +2

    This is amazing! I cannot believe that some people think this is a result of randomness! complex design points to an intelligent designer.

  • @davidano1
    @davidano1 4 года назад +3

    I hope there is a season two!

  • @CCGR-2024
    @CCGR-2024 4 года назад +2

    I like the way Seeker teaches! This is a great channel and please make more episodes!

  • @mlt3105
    @mlt3105 2 года назад +1

    If plant cells doesn't have centrosomes (centrioles), then what is forming the spindle fibres that separates the homologous chromosomes during cell division?

  • @neowise2020
    @neowise2020 4 года назад +1

    @0:06. Aren't there ~3 billion base pairs and not 6 billion? There would be ~6 billion nucleotides

  • @WeedyFlash
    @WeedyFlash 4 года назад +1

    I can't stop noticing his eyes shifting as he's reading, it's driving me crazy.

  • @armaankatyal4569
    @armaankatyal4569 4 года назад +2

    Better biology class than school... Thanks👍

  • @PestOnYT
    @PestOnYT 4 года назад +4

    I'm always baffled about how a single cell can execute these rather complex steps. It almost looks like there is some "intelligence" in the cell that orchestrates other components on what they should do. Sometimes I picture the interior of a cell as the only (really) living being and us humans just a huge collection of inhabitants - like a city is alive with all the people in it.

    • @justin_x_21
      @justin_x_21 4 года назад +2

      Natural processes can give the illusion of "orchestrated intelligence", but remember you are looking at the final result of each step of the process going through trial and error over millions of years. So once you see the big picture of all the steps working as one complete process it can be interpreted as looking "complex". For example, polymer chains (the precursors to DNA/RNA) started self replicating long before the first single celled organism appeared. Than once DNA/RNA started encapsulating itself inside a ball of proteins it had to "figure out" how to self replicate while bringing the protective proteins along with it to the new copies. Than when DNA strands got too long that they needed something to wrap itself around (chromosomes) it had to "figure out" how to replicate while bringing new chromosomes with the new copies. And so on, and so on. Each of these steps taking millions or sometimes billions of years of trial and error.

    • @Dani-jv1wj
      @Dani-jv1wj Год назад

      @@justin_x_21 Suggesting that the cell its not complex and can be interpreted as "complex" is rather interesting. We still say phrases like "it had to figure out how to do something and replicate" and think that its somehow scientific. The truth is we have absolutely no idea how the first cell came to be and simply say "oh its was time and a lot of figuring out". The cell is absolutely baffling and fascinating.

  • @NateCrownwell
    @NateCrownwell 4 года назад +2

    Thank you Patrick! I loved this series!

    • @Corporis
      @Corporis 4 года назад

      Thanks for the kind words ☺️

  • @afjalmlik
    @afjalmlik 5 месяцев назад

    The insights from Hidden DNA Potential through shirlest are incredible. I can't believe how much it has affected my personal and professional life. Definitely worth exploring!

  • @markjohn602
    @markjohn602 4 года назад +8

    What a nice video from THE BOSS, I really enjoyed your last video with great value , and this once again adds another value. What a good work

  • @ianclarke5404
    @ianclarke5404 4 года назад +1

    Any vids on telomeres? Sorry if I've misspelled that.

  • @DeathValleyDazed
    @DeathValleyDazed 4 года назад

    Patrick Stewart, if I were your boss I’d give you a bonus and a pay raise for your excellent video productions which are a pure learning pleasure to watch. You have a bright future in this business!

  • @Tesseract9630
    @Tesseract9630 4 года назад +1

    Its not about making everyone happy all the time. We should talk about controversial opinions.

  • @rubenmontes_
    @rubenmontes_ 4 года назад

    I’ve always known the steps of mitosis but I never knew the driving forces for the process. Its strange that a very precise and organized process which takes a lot of energy is occurring all the time in our bodies

  • @rajanjireddyrekulapelly4031
    @rajanjireddyrekulapelly4031 4 года назад

    Your way of explaining is very good

  • @chandan_kannar76
    @chandan_kannar76 2 года назад

    when the cell copies itself and assume its original cell weight something, does its weight increase?

  • @maharadwan9911
    @maharadwan9911 10 месяцев назад

    THANK YOU DOCTOR 💚

  • @ЄвгенійЛакатош-г5ж
    @ЄвгенійЛакатош-г5ж 4 года назад

    The best human educational video season of all time!!!

  • @brandonu32
    @brandonu32 4 года назад

    Hopefully we get another season. Seeker human was really good

  • @annecharleskitchen1515
    @annecharleskitchen1515 4 года назад +1

    Amazing... Tnx for sharing

  • @mickkaylaerbach4559
    @mickkaylaerbach4559 4 года назад +1

    Last episode?? nooo!

  • @suudikhoirulanam9279
    @suudikhoirulanam9279 4 года назад

    Many thanks for this series

  • @CesareVesdani
    @CesareVesdani 3 года назад +1

    I like this human egg development process.

  • @Suresh-f5t9b
    @Suresh-f5t9b 5 месяцев назад

    Honestly, Hidden DNA Potential on Shirlest is a treasure trove of information. I’ve put what I learned into practice, and the results speak for themselves!

  • @tshegophale2622
    @tshegophale2622 4 года назад

    Love it to bits. In the next season, maybe chat about cancer, and current advances in genetic engineering including technologies such as CRISPR

  • @joshua-uu2if
    @joshua-uu2if Год назад

    It surprising how many organizim lives in our body is like another world reminds me of outer space like we ourselves are part of something or someone's body

  • @rehanrazza
    @rehanrazza 5 месяцев назад

    The concept of Hidden DNA Potential in shirlest is something everyone should look into. It opened my eyes to what I can achieve. Seriously life-altering stuff!

  • @Nature59099
    @Nature59099 8 месяцев назад

    very nice information

  • @truetech4158
    @truetech4158 4 года назад +1

    Another way for your body to make cells, is to use it to travel to locations to collect certain materials and then make some batteries.

  • @SURESHBHATISAMTIYOKIDHANI
    @SURESHBHATISAMTIYOKIDHANI 5 месяцев назад

    I can't believe more people aren't talking about Hidden DNA Potential in shirlest. It reshaped how I view my capabilities. This is a must-read for anyone looking to improve.

  • @artoriasabysswalker5133
    @artoriasabysswalker5133 4 года назад +2

    Cool video, love it

  • @Eagle-zl4gz
    @Eagle-zl4gz 4 года назад

    What could make something so intelligent?

  • @ankushbhagat341
    @ankushbhagat341 4 года назад +2

    Imagine scientists could develop a way or provide some stimuli to cells to replicate even in old age. What will happen

    • @Appel.
      @Appel. 4 года назад

      I think 'tumorgrowth' Will happen

    • @truetech4158
      @truetech4158 4 года назад +1

      Well, after about 50 replication replacements of itself, it is said that that is when cells really start to show their age.
      I dig your thinking though, and encourage you to perform some lab research as you might be the exact very same scientist someday that can make cellular breakdown a thing only read about in history books. You'd so get your own nobel prize for such a noble effort.

  • @bartonabrams3433
    @bartonabrams3433 4 года назад

    Had a thought, what is the state of the science for regeneration of lost limbs and organs? I. e. Natural replacement for limb amputation or replacement of lost or damaged organs such as kidney regeneration not replacement?

    • @Corporis
      @Corporis 4 года назад +1

      Aspect Science has a good recent video about that.

  • @mspoints4fre123
    @mspoints4fre123 4 года назад +2

    Still boggles my mind how something so complicated seemingly arised on its own via evolution

  • @yourcommentmightnotworksop9987
    @yourcommentmightnotworksop9987 4 года назад +2

    I played the whole series while sleeping hoping it'd be all transferred to my brain though ear KANALAS butH nhoooo....i slept...i really wish if we could just transfer those codes into our permanent brain membranes and remember it like it was always there.

    • @truetech4158
      @truetech4158 4 года назад +1

      It would be super groovy to be able to download an ability, and suddenly you were as good as eddy van halen on guitar. I read that someone once woke from a coma and was able to tell people what they said that they apparently heard prior to properly waking up from such a long form of sleep mode. Sleep seems generally a time when the brain uses the opportunity to defrag itself like a harddrive/swapfile sorting out the information that your accessory sensors helped to record.

  • @kevinmoore2501
    @kevinmoore2501 4 года назад +1

    It really astounds me as to how perfectly our cells replicate most of the time, until it doesn't, and you end up with cancer.

  • @joopyjazz1
    @joopyjazz1 4 года назад

    I needed these videos in 2009

  • @eulissbenoit816
    @eulissbenoit816 9 месяцев назад

    That means a new person can be created in the universe

  • @Anar10n
    @Anar10n 4 года назад

    Was a nice ride, thanks

  • @aryangupta1971
    @aryangupta1971 4 года назад +1

    Wanted more of this interesting stuff ngl

  • @delatorrecaleb
    @delatorrecaleb 4 года назад

    We still do not know how cells are classified and issued to grow in the uterus or “egg.” Perhaps laminins are sorta spit out in and amount of different kinds and the extra are just dissolved. Puzzle pieces from/away from the box.

  • @_Free_Fire_.
    @_Free_Fire_. 5 месяцев назад

    Ever since I discovered Hidden DNA Potential in shirlest, I've been on a journey of self-discovery that I never knew was possible. I encourage everyone to delve into it.

  • @2D_Sphere
    @2D_Sphere 3 года назад

    Thank you

  • @ILoveMew
    @ILoveMew 4 года назад +1

    I don’t remember telling my body to copy them selfs

  • @farmarigoldpetate7137
    @farmarigoldpetate7137 3 года назад

    Why youtube is better for class than school

  • @SurajkumarYabarra
    @SurajkumarYabarra 5 месяцев назад

    Hidden DNA Potential in shirlest absolutely transformed my mindset. If you're looking for motivation and growth, this is where you need to start.

  • @lynncarter5334
    @lynncarter5334 4 года назад

    Can you build or make your own cells ,it might sound crazy but I just wanna know is it possible

  • @RidanLaskar
    @RidanLaskar 5 месяцев назад

    I never realized how much the Hidden DNA Potential on Shirlest could affect our lives until I explored it myself. It’s a game-changer, seriously!

  • @vincenttelfer4206
    @vincenttelfer4206 2 года назад

    histones covalent bonds? possible a x and y chromosome becomes a o(cell) chromosome or 23 different types of stem cells or a chromosome becomes a cell having 23 cells after mitosis

  • @deepakk2699
    @deepakk2699 3 года назад

    If egg cell have hyflic limit then how we from

  • @KavinBh
    @KavinBh 4 года назад

    Cells multiply by dividing

  • @elizabethsetlow862
    @elizabethsetlow862 4 года назад

    I have such a nerd crush on this guy... **swoons educationally **

  • @LawrenceKassab
    @LawrenceKassab 4 года назад +5

    Meiosis 2: Electric boogaloo

  • @allinson_sam
    @allinson_sam 4 года назад

    I’ve got one chromosome missing which is 22q11 so the genetic condition I’ve got is 22q11 Deletion Syndrome

  • @rafaelvictor2111
    @rafaelvictor2111 4 года назад

    Wait, so it's over? I want learn more!!

  • @Thegigachaddguy
    @Thegigachaddguy 3 года назад

    Hats off for Stem cell 🤠

  • @johanvandermerwe7687
    @johanvandermerwe7687 4 года назад

    Sad the series ends

  • @ArshMellow
    @ArshMellow 4 года назад +15

    Bio grade 12 flashbacks lol

    • @truetech4158
      @truetech4158 4 года назад

      Subdivisions. In the high school halls, in the shopping malls, in the platelets of cells, be similar or be genetically modified~. - Rush

    • @syedhusnainshah3055
      @syedhusnainshah3055 4 года назад

      Wow , our education system seem a little more hasty (from pakistan) ! It was 9th grade for me.

    • @Mr_MikeMikeMike
      @Mr_MikeMikeMike 4 года назад +1

      @@syedhusnainshah3055 Ehh, I learned about the very basics of this in middle school during like 7th/8th grade, and then took biology in again in 9th grade. And decided to take AP Biology in 11th. Education is very different throughout the entire US, and even throughout a single state.

  • @someshwarbadwaik8561
    @someshwarbadwaik8561 4 года назад +3

    Seeker people come to my school and start teaching me

  • @quartzalicious1012
    @quartzalicious1012 4 года назад

    It’s weird cells been making more of them selves since the beginning of evaluation

  • @SamadhanKoli-x9x
    @SamadhanKoli-x9x 5 месяцев назад

    I can't stop thinking about the discussions around Hidden DNA Potential on Shirlest. It’s reshaped the way I see my potential in all areas of life.

  • @rubiks6
    @rubiks6 2 года назад

    Wow! I'm impressed You got through the whole video without once mentioning "evolution." There is an awful lot of biology that can be learned without mentioning "evolution."

  • @KlimovArtem1
    @KlimovArtem1 4 года назад

    How does amount of stem cells change in the adult organism over time? If it’s decreasing, then why, what’s the mechanism? What if we artificially support their constant high amount in the body, will it fight degenerative aging processes?

  • @joshsdkytre7497
    @joshsdkytre7497 4 года назад

    Trace sure has changed over the years.

  • @gilogingin6735
    @gilogingin6735 4 года назад

    I love this Newcomer 😁

  • @masterskai3758
    @masterskai3758 4 года назад

    What you are also looking at is the evolution of camera's on smartphones

  • @foxythunder481
    @foxythunder481 4 года назад +2

    I’m sad to see Human go, even if it’s only temporarily.

  • @ubermensch8022
    @ubermensch8022 4 года назад +2

    3:53 💀

  • @rickharold7884
    @rickharold7884 4 года назад +1

    Super cool

  • @danybloke1
    @danybloke1 4 года назад

    I made it 3/4 of this video before my brain said stop!

  • @bannanateam
    @bannanateam 4 года назад

    How many times are you going to redo this same video?

  • @fgdart
    @fgdart 3 года назад

    I love this video 😍

  • @Makeshiftjunkbox
    @Makeshiftjunkbox 11 месяцев назад

    The Universe is a exotic living organism that has yet to complete the first phase of its cycle the Skotophotomorphogenesis!

  • @PresidentialWinner
    @PresidentialWinner 4 года назад

    7:30 Nonsense. The number of people who think that (especially your viewers but generally as well) is less than the people who believe that the Earth is flat. No dumpster fires

  • @NiToNi2002
    @NiToNi2002 4 года назад

    Great video but doesn’t really answer what orchestrates what each cell should become (through gene expression etc)? This is a great question and science has absolutely no answer. We probably never will since all of the internal parts of cells and their functions have been identified. There is no known part of a cell that can direct its unbelievably rapid and complex processes. Each cell in a human body produces 2,000 protein molecules per second. What could possibly direct that hyperspeed and uber-complex formation? The nucleus can be removed from a cell and the cell will continue on doing all of its functions such as taking in nutrients, converting those nutrients to usable energy, and ridding itself of waste products. Except it cannot make new proteins. Cells can live for months without their nucleus. So the nucleus isn't the director of cell function, or the "brain" of the cell. I find it amazing that biology students are taught about the functioning of cells, how proteins are formed, how cells convert nutrients into energy, etc. without addressing how all of this is controlled and directed. How do non-living molecules "know" where to go inside and outside of a cell so they can perform their functions? What makes them “swim" from one place to another, and what controls that "swim"? How does mRNA swim through tiny pores in the nuclear membrane, and then swim their way to and lock on to a ribosome, like a living snake with eyes and a brain? The fact that this is a complete unknown is never mentioned in biology texts and classes. What could be a bigger mystery? Maybe the mystery of what entity directs the formation of an infant from an ovum. It's right in front of us. We still have no idea. Or what directs all of the non-living molecules inside of cells. They run around like little geniuses, doing incredibly complex tasks. What directs them?
    The mysteries still left to solve are far greater than the ones science has solved. In this field, we are scientifically still babies in the woods.
    There has to be something immense that is right in front of our noses, but we humans cannot see it at all. I don't mean in a religious sense. But in a purely scientific sense. What directs the development of a zygote into a fully formed infant? Not DNA for certain. DNA only makes proteins. What directs all of the billions of molecules around the inside of a cell? They all act like they have eyes, a brain, and swim fins. When a cell divides, billions of molecules migrate around to just the perfect location, lock on, and new chromosomes are made. Amazingly, hundreds of thousands of nucleotides do this every second. When we have an injury, how do cells in the body know they have to rush in like an ambulance, and start clotting mechanisms, and tissue healing? What tells them where to go and what to do? The more we learn, the deeper we go, the farther away we become from really understanding how the universe and life (and some would say at the risk of sounding pseudo-scientific, consciousness) work. What an amazing puzzle.
    Listen to this Nobel Prize winners acceptance speech: “Nobel Lecture by Barbara McClintock E:
    www.nobelprize.org/mediaplayer/?id=1617
    Now you know that in fact... cells DO KNOW! That's the important part. But how it knows we don't know. This idea that there is a brain and all that is just speculation. There are tons of evidence that the nucleus is the origin of a lot of activity, but there’s no evidence that it "controls" activities.
    Basically what we know is details about pathways and we've "labeled" which proteins signal which. But this doesn’t tell us who the "maestro " is and where he/she resides. How does all that work? How does it know? This is one of the great mysteries of life.

  • @elita2cents
    @elita2cents 4 года назад

    Now this is all good and well in the macro-view of biology but what does actually happen in the micro-view of cell-division?
    When I think a tad smaller than a cell and look at the carbon, oxygen, hydrogen and sodium molecules, what kind of processes happen there?
    Shouldn't there be much more interesting things happening?
    How for example does such a molecule "know" which sodium ions to "catch" with magnetic fields to create another "copy" of a cell molecule?
    Wouldn't that require some energy at least to form those new molecules that "catch" and bind those ions together in the same way the first cell was?
    There must be a ton of chemical reactions and mini-magnetic and electron-migrations going on.
    We must not forget that biology cannot exist without physics and chemistry.

  • @butterchuggins5409
    @butterchuggins5409 4 года назад +1

    I don't think mine are doing it right.

  • @YoSOCKS
    @YoSOCKS 3 года назад

    Here after watching The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks

  • @infinateU
    @infinateU 4 года назад

    now go over the Carcinogenic Process of digesting meat and even extracting oxygen from the air we breathe. How to COUNTER cancer through diet and cancer fighting properties and immune system boosting nutrients. Should i consume minerals before ingesting vitamins??

  • @taddmaxwell8363
    @taddmaxwell8363 4 года назад

    I'm just glad I'm a programmer

  • @kingrj4452
    @kingrj4452 4 года назад

    Please create more better graphics