I love this level of verisimilitude! But could someone with expertise please explain just how close to reality these videos come? The colors are artifice, of course, but how about the rest?
@WEHImovies7 сағат бұрын
30 min presentation on wehi.tv animation, what is real science and what is art kzbin.info/www/bejne/p5Pcq3ifd9uVjtksi=itxbkKV5ELY2ua4j
@shirootaku664110 сағат бұрын
Nice movie
10 сағат бұрын
Looks a bit like a mermaid
@ultragames566313 сағат бұрын
those are amazing animations. Quite different to reading about this in a book. This must be very helpful for students and professionals trying to learn and understand the subject better.
@felipemorales518115 сағат бұрын
Imagine this but the proteins 100 × more jiggley and fluid
@joshroolf196617 сағат бұрын
Wow. By far one of the best molecular animations I've ever seen!!! I think you've really captured the frenetic grace of the processes in an aesthetically pleasant way, great job everybody.🌞💚🐾🐾🐾 I feel like a big squishy robot now..:::🛸🧬🌌🙉
@WeirdInfoTV22 сағат бұрын
Can't believe that there are actually people that denies the existence of these beautiful molecular bio-machines
@iestynneКүн бұрын
I was wondering how these incredible animations were made - thank you so much for sharing! It would be amazing to see this running in VR. Unity has good VR support, so it would mostly depend on what kind of performance you get since VR generally requires more than 2x the compute for rendering than does a 'flat' game.
@iestynneКүн бұрын
Absolutely unbelievable. It's like magic. So hard to grasp that this evolved via stochastic processes. I do wonder if human technology will ever catch up. It's just so so far ahead of us, and took such a monumental optimization process to create.
@iestynneКүн бұрын
Amazing! I have 2 questions: 1 is this a simulation of the process or a 'representative' hand-made/procedural animation? 2 where does the proteasome get the energy for this process?
@iestynneКүн бұрын
Thought of 2 more questions: 3 what's the time slow-down factor for what we're seeing as compared to the real process? 4 how many of these proteasomes are active simultaneously in the typical human cell?
@iestynneКүн бұрын
This excellent talk on how the animations were produced answered two of my questions: m.kzbin.info/www/bejne/p5Pcq3ifd9uVjtk Time is slowed down by a factor of about a billion, and is derived from actual molecular simulations, however the animation is hand-tuned a fair bit to make it read more clearly for the viewer (reality would be way too messy to understand!)
@youtubeuser6067Күн бұрын
As AI plays a greater role in clarifying movements and interactions of these molecular processes, it becomes more important to UPDATE previous depictions so that research can be further advanced. I hope there is one website with all of these previous videos (dated) that will soon indicate AI enhancements to them.
@pensularnaseeare9531Күн бұрын
This is the craziest thing I watch today.
@nicopb4240Күн бұрын
Omg this video is so good
@sonhuansonКүн бұрын
A real challenge for those who create molecules, in turn creating the pair that recycles it.
@donross7820Күн бұрын
So beautifully crafted! Thank you
@rkgkiКүн бұрын
Well done! I really like the chemical reality of constant motion, and bits bouncing all over the place.
@PatrickStaightКүн бұрын
I have a couple questions if anyone is up for them: • How efficient is the recycling system? Particularly, what percentage of damaged proteins fail to get recycled? • Are the number of Proteasomes in a cell comparable to the number of Ribosomes? • How accurate are the systems which attach the ubiquitin to proteins? • Do Proteasomes operate both inside and outside the nucleus?
@MichaelFlambe13 сағат бұрын
I have some answers for you! a) The system is very efficient - all of those peptides will go on to be used within the cell. The raw matter is not lost, the only inefficiency is an energy one, I believe ATP is used to run the unfolding machinery of the proteasome, and more ATP will be needed to put new proteins back together, b) Yes, there are many ribosomes, and many proteasomes - although the exact numbers are not important, what is is that the proteasome is only one mechanism of many recycling mechanisms your cells have for facilitate resource turnover within your cell. Thus the ratio of proteasomes to ribosomes is not really important as your question presumes. Google Autophagy as that is the true cellular recycling boss, proteasomes are more "precision" recycling machines. c) They can be extremely perfectly accurate (dictated by the exact jigsaw fingerprint of ubiquitin binding of the target protein, and a facilitator signaling protein) but sometimes they are more relaxed, for example you may release a protein temporarily to attach ubiquitin to a lot of stuff as a stress response, and itll last a while then degrade after a time. d) Yes. Hope that helps, have a good day =)
@Gabriel-wq3lhКүн бұрын
This is mind blowing! Just wow.
@JoshWitteКүн бұрын
Looks like a woman in a green dress with a yellow flower in her pink hair
@paulferry7791Күн бұрын
This would have made learning biochemistry so much easier back when I took it 30 years ago.
@donross7820Күн бұрын
I love it! Thank you
@donross7820Күн бұрын
I love it! This is so beautiful and creative. I do 3D animations and so I am doubly appreciative of your creativity.
@Falconer5752Күн бұрын
So, has anyone yet thought about using or modifying these guys to fight Prions?
@GaryyostКүн бұрын
Wow, just wow so much... a thousand times WOW! To see all of this so clearly, what a miracle. The three chambers of the core? I had no idea that's how this worked. Thank you so much!!!!!
@carlosli76022 күн бұрын
Just so amazing, a full picture of the story.
@user-uo8yz1xy1h2 күн бұрын
Thanks for vdo.❤❤❤
@Gelatinocyte22 күн бұрын
As always, the sound design is top notch!
@BlackLukeS2 күн бұрын
KZbin compression algorithm hates this video
@rodrigomoreno112 күн бұрын
Amazing!
@koxafis2 күн бұрын
Babe! Wake up! WEHI just uploaded another banger short film!
@agusavior_channel2 күн бұрын
that is how a plumbus is made
@xfxox2 күн бұрын
This animation is mind-blowing ! Thank you
@kongolandwalker2 күн бұрын
Where does the motor take energy for its work? Does untangling protein take energy or release energy? Cutting stage looks like being powered by chaotic movement. Is it the same with motor: it works like a diod allowing chaotic movement down the pipe, but blocking reverse movement? (I think that explanation would delete the need in source of energy).
@Gelatinocyte22 күн бұрын
I think it uses ATP, it's just not shown in the video for clarity sake.
amazing, thanks a lot WEHImovies team! we love you.
@Melih_R_Calikoglu3 күн бұрын
We are far away from processing molecular structures individually, yet it is happening inside of us billions of times a day, for hundreds of millions of years. Crazy stuff
@paulferry7791Күн бұрын
It's estimated to be around 30 to 40 trillion times per SECOND in all our cells working in concert to give us this thing we call life.
@themushroominside6540Күн бұрын
I find it so wonderful how all of this came about from random chaos, i find that the idea that there is some greater will or being some how brought about complexity to be rather boring, it really undermines the sheer scale of it all, with such few rules to follow, infinite possibilities come forth, complexity from the mundane, i find it all beautiful.
@iffyfox974917 сағат бұрын
@@themushroominside6540 We all came from a billions of years old microscopic 3D Tetris game, I enjoy describing it like that because it's not entirely correct nor is it entirely incorrect
@hydrochloricacid673116 сағат бұрын
I don't know what you mean by that, we can process individual molecules, just not with the same speed and efficiency.
@user-sj5lc3uw2i3 күн бұрын
babe! wake up! new wehi video!!
@BrentLeVasseur3 күн бұрын
Great job on the 3D animation for this video.
@anjotheweezky2153 күн бұрын
Ultimate evil Malaria is
@Yoga_talk3 күн бұрын
OMG!
@charlescabana78494 күн бұрын
Learned something. Makes my day.
@LiminalArcade14 күн бұрын
This apparently happened ”spontaneously” when life started on earth
@fr_rave17 сағат бұрын
yes, after a long time
@igamerxd84504 күн бұрын
You are an amazing human, thank you for simplifying such a complex biological mechanical structures and mechanism to easily understandable chunks. Thank you for your work. Love your channel and your passion.
@TheHildegard014 күн бұрын
Great👀
@boringman64914 күн бұрын
Work, work, work.
@ks1v4 күн бұрын
Wow, many thanks
@peters9724 күн бұрын
Just when you thought you had seen it all, another fascinating machine you took for granted, who would have thought, specialized garbage collection and recycling of reusable parts. I thought stuff just dissolved or something, more like inorganic chemistry, but it’s all very specific machinery, built atom by atom.