You'll notice there's not a sponsor on this video. That means it's 100% supported by Patrons. Thank you for considering support for Smarter Every Day at www.patreon.com/smartereveryday . I'm grateful!
@MagralhoPT3 ай бұрын
As a microbiologist myself, this is so engrained into me that I cant fathom this being that impressive to Destiny... microbiology is a wonderful world of biomechanical systems that only now we are starting to emulate. Thank you for showing and spreading this knowledge to everyone!
@GarrettOtt-ls2ml3 ай бұрын
No problem man love your content
@Dreeev3 ай бұрын
The "just asking questions" and "consider the debate", while trying to be neutral, still comes off as being way too charitable toward creationism than necessary. Not all debates are productive, and not all sides in a debate are equally legitimate.
@giordanobruno13333 ай бұрын
@@Dreeev there is no debate. The evidence for evolution is overwhelming. Nothing in biology makes sense except in light of evolution by natural selection. Creationism is an argument against authority. A complete logical fallacy.
@ropro98173 ай бұрын
Congrats on episode 300, Destin! 🎉 Looking forward to learning more cool things with you in the next 300! 🤠
@besmart3 ай бұрын
As a molecular biologist, I think Destin did a great job of explaining how the expression, imaging, chemotaxis, and the rest works. I hope this video makes people think deeply and ask important questions. And if this comment gets enough upvotes I’ll do a video about ATP synthase 😂
@DjSapsan3 ай бұрын
Please just make a video, people will like it more than this comment ❤
@naraferalina23083 ай бұрын
First time I learned about ATP synthase, I had Destin's reaction. It's just amazing to see the generator work the way... well, generators work.
@mattanderson87373 ай бұрын
ATP ♾️
@TDREXrx93 ай бұрын
I would love to see a video on ATP synthase Dr. Joe. I remember having a similar reaction to learn of ATP synthase. The countless little proton motors that make Eukaryotes function!
@randallrobertson71903 ай бұрын
Tagged just in case you post that video.
@Nighthawkinlight3 ай бұрын
The thing that's been blowing my mind the last year or so is nitrogen fixation. Nitrogen is an essential ingredient for life but the majority of it is bound up in an inaccessible state of triple bonded N2. To split that bond in a laboratory you need something like 500°C temperatures at 200+ atmospheres of pressure. It takes a tremendous amount of energy. And yet, there are bacteria with these enormously complex enzymes called nitrogenases that can take triple bonded atmospheric nitrogen and in a move just short of magic (I'm being facetious) break it apart at or below room temp. Without nitrogenase life on earth would have all died off long ago as earth's supply of free nitrogen was consumed, but these bacteria saved us all. More than that, nitrogenase itself requires elements like molybdenum which are also biologically inaccessible - except for other very particular bacteria that have the ability to collect it and make it accessible to the ones that use it for nitrogen fixation. All over the place there are biological process that seem to intuit the needs of others, and not always with an apparent benifit to the giver. If I weren't alive I'd find life unbelievable.
@Dee-nonamnamrson87183 ай бұрын
Brilliant comment. 👍💯
@SuperStruct3 ай бұрын
Peas and Beans! Fixing nitrogen into my garden soil for 5+ years. Perennial BEANS! Edit: Yet you still need that bacteria to form a symbiotic relationship with the roots of the peas / beans
@Liam_Patton3 ай бұрын
It's arguments like these that really highlight how much probability nails the coffin shut on a lot of theories. I'm the same guy who commented about the shazam firework on your zipper video. If you've never done the math to see the probability of the right combination of amino acids coming together and folding correctly to create a ribosome, I suspect it'll blow your mind. Also, there's something I've been stewing on recently that you touch on here: The chemistry needed for the random components of biological life to form is different for many of the pieces. Certain utterly necessary biological components cannot form naturally in the same conditions as each other. In order for a nitrogenase to function, it has to be in a creature that has mechanisms to create more nitrogenase and then subsequently make use of the nitrates that are produced. The chemistry of a nitrogenase is incredible on its own from structure to complexity to function. What are the odds that it accidentally formed? At all? Just doing the math on component combinations for amino acids and biomolecules has been plenty to just make my brain melt from the sheer improbability of it all. Add to that the fact that it supposedly formed inside an organism. An organism that was subsequently able to utilize it. That was subsequently able to replicate it. And that organism was also able to replicate itself. It amazes me that simple microbes are able to do things that it took thousands of years for us to figure out. Doing the math to assess probability makes it a whole other thing.
@focumQuarium3 ай бұрын
Oh "give it enough time" and random stuff will create wonders :) Isn't that what many claim nowadays?
@GhostEmblem3 ай бұрын
Wouldnt it just be very diffferent rather than exctinct
@TheBioCosmos3 ай бұрын
Biologist here, this is the part where I see many people make the wrong assumption. The flagella in a sperm is COMPLETELY DIFFERENT from the rotating flagella in a bacterium. The name is the same, I know, but they operate completely differently. The sperm flagella does not rotate at all, It's actually a sliding mechanism inside that creates a swaying motion. The flagella in bacteria are the rotating ones! ATP Synthase, though, is also another rotating molecular machines that exist in both bacteria and mammalian cells.
@CorkyMcButterpants3 ай бұрын
Well said. Just learn Latin and you’ll never go wrong.
@dsdsspp71303 ай бұрын
that's the whole point people are making. The flagella has many of the components of this motor but acts in completely different way. that means the motor is not irreducibly complex, it can still function just not as a motor. same thing with feathers, crows have them so do penguins, one flies the other one swims.
@durg89093 ай бұрын
Yeah the anti-evolution comments on this video hurt to read. These things definitely have functionality short of being a perfectly optimized motor, but someone who has never seen a proton gradient, enzymes rotating other proteins, etc might think this is all unique to this one system.
@solandri693 ай бұрын
Thanks. I vaguely recalled that from biology class, and your explanation saves me half an hour of an embarrassing search about sperm to confirm. It's like the mechanism which makes dragonflies (and damselflies) the premier fliers of the insect world. All other insects have all four wings (or two wings + counterweights) mounted to their back carapace. And musles which shake the carapace up and down make the wings flap (but only together). OTOH dragonflies have muscles connected to the base of each wing. That allows them to flap and pivot each wing indepdently, giving them supreme maneuverability. They look the same at first glance, but mechanically they're completely different.
@pvic69593 ай бұрын
honeslty, thats really cool too. id loev to see a model of how the sliding motion works
@sorsdeus2 ай бұрын
My wife is a Biology PhD (I am an engineer)... I am as surprised as you are with all this information... and she is like... yes we have known many of those things for a long time. This is great cross-scientific work and super important to have cross-pollination among different scientific disciplines.
@jeffsmith72952 ай бұрын
DID EITHER OF YOU CONSIDER THAT IT'S ALL CREATED BY GOD ??? THE BODY IS AN ORGANICAL ROBOT & THE BRAIN IS AN ELECTRICAL GENERATOR & COMPUTER & YOUR EYES ARE ORGANICAL DIGITAL CAMERAS, YOUR OPTICAL NERVES ARE U.S.B. CABLES THAT 'TRANSMIT ENCRYPTED LIGHT SIGNALS' TO THE PROCESSOR SO WE CAN SEE 3 D. IMAGES OUTSIDE OF OUR SKULLS & YOUR HEART IS AN ELECTRICALY POWERED HYDRAULICAL PUMP WITH A SPARK PLUG AT THE TOP & BOTTOM OF IT !!! WE ARE JUST ORGANICAL HIGH TECH. ROBOTS & OUR LIKES & DISLIKES ARE NOTHING BUT COMPUTER PROGRAMMING, AN ILLUSION OF 'SELF AWARENESS' !!! SOMEONE'S TOYS !!! UNLESS THEIR IS A SOUL DRIVING THE BODY WHICH WOULD MEAN THAT THE BODY WAS CREATED FOR THE SOUL !!!
@EdwardBlair2 ай бұрын
She probably told you a thousand times
@r.a4623Ай бұрын
@@EdwardBlair 🤣
@patrickjordan2233Ай бұрын
@@EdwardBlair"I'm so, so sorry Dear... I was so busy Listening, I didn't Hear you..." - fun Note? Careful trying this on the Professional Snark Spouse (results May Not be as expected..🤣😂🤣😂)
@richarddodge134927 күн бұрын
Have seen a diagram of ATPase, which closely resembles a sump pump; however, cannot imagine the actual process of converting ADP to ATP. Profoundly curious.
@DanyAshby3 ай бұрын
Finally, an explanation for how Tails' helicopter butt works in Sonic the Hedgehog
@cbob2133 ай бұрын
Haha
@Armc314163 ай бұрын
I wonder how Tails deals with the unbalanced torque. Maybe counter-rotating tails?
@heyjustj3 ай бұрын
After skimming a comment thread debate about science/god in this comment section I’m relieved to have found this comment. This is the kind of high level comment I come to the comment section for! “Helicopter butt” is the chefs kiss of accurate description.
@TerryHausenn3 ай бұрын
@@heyjustj reddit brain
@filiproch36533 ай бұрын
fun fact: there’s a protein called sonic the hedgehog :))
@nickfotopoulos53233 ай бұрын
I love how when Prash talks about the clockwise and counter-clockwise motion he moves the motor in the appropriate direction for the viewer and not himself. It demonstrates his natural ability to get outside of his own head and perspective effortlessly.
@simocity993 ай бұрын
I think he's actually thinking the appropriate direction with respect to the bacteria, not the viewer, the engine only fit in one way
@leehall54473 ай бұрын
@@Danuxsyare you asking a question?
@jurczakc3 ай бұрын
Agreed almost instantly when he began speaking I had a good feeling about this video. Prash was awesome!
@NWGuerrilla3 ай бұрын
@@simocity99 Yeah not sure what planet this guy is living on
@MC4TWT3 ай бұрын
That's just instinct for a professor.
@octavianova13003 ай бұрын
"I'm getting emotional now, cuz there's a missile that I've worked on in the past" -literally the most American sentence I have ever heard in my life 😅😅
@pianogal8533 ай бұрын
Funny take, but he's 'getting emotional' because this machine is just like something he designed, and the obvious explanation is that this could never (mathematically) have come about by chance.
@nowonda19843 ай бұрын
@@pianogal853 "This could never mathematically have come about by change" ("obviously"), yet he showed another example of a very similar molecular contraption (the injector), which has a similar form, but with different proteins. It's like the almighty "creator", in all its greatness, only had one design to go with or, just maybe... I don't know, maybe nature found a way to rotate mutually clenched molecules, which is so "obviously" unnatural that it found it more than once.
@elkippy3 ай бұрын
@@pianogal853 I mean peolole have designed plenty of stuff that has then been found to have been naturally evolved in nature already, evolution is efficient.
@elkippy3 ай бұрын
Yeah that was awkward
@strangelee44003 ай бұрын
I think the 'God did it' was the most American thing he said.
@AntonioTorloniАй бұрын
Great job! I am a physician. In the 1970’s we used to have retreats of physicians, engineers,and physicists. Together we were able to solve problems in each others specialties. If I win the lottery, I will restart this retreat!
@thekeysman676021 күн бұрын
1970s*, no apostrophe saying 1970 is. Seventies has no apostrophe. 🕊️
@danielnielsen197712 күн бұрын
I agree! That's how the greatest thing's get started. Each of us have ideas. Not always the right ideas for what we're thinking, solving, accomplishing. Our fellow man & woman are Dimonds in the ruff with ideas.🔥
@DocJaco3 ай бұрын
Biologist here, just wanted to point out to other viewers that the flagella in eukaryotic cells (like sperm) are totally different from those found in bacteria and archaea. While bacteria and archaea rotate, eukayote flagella bend and whip.
@keeganbarry10583 ай бұрын
@docjaco this is so interesting, so do you know if the molecular motors are fundamentally different or do they share a similar construct but with different end effects?
@DocJaco3 ай бұрын
@@keeganbarry1058 Their mechanisms are completely different. In eukaryotes the flagellum is basically pulled back and forth by tiny tubes and doesn't rotate at all!
@CallyCottin3 ай бұрын
So no new contraception method ahead?
@VoIcanoman3 ай бұрын
Came here to write this exact thing. Thanks for keeping the people informed!
@DocJaco3 ай бұрын
@@CallyCottin hahaha, not that I'm aware of!
@msch4ever3 ай бұрын
As a software and civil engineer, I have to say my mind is blown. Mechanical engineering and microbiology seem so different, but they're actually incredibly interconnected and share many similarities. It's fascinating how people in these fields can communicate so effectively. I never regret supporting you on Patreon; it's been incredibly interesting and rewarding. Thank you so much!
@peterectasy29573 ай бұрын
he said he is christian and those motors even more convinced him but, maybe we were not created by christianic god -)
@ricardoamendoeira38003 ай бұрын
I guess the fact that both fields are bound by the same laws of physics makes it so solutions to problems often share similarities.
@HerbertTowers3 ай бұрын
In other words - you don't understand.
@edwinwierszelis6943 ай бұрын
We already use Generative AI. We observe its fast progress. It does not look too distant for it to evolve into Godly Creative A(?) I. As a software engineer, you know that regardless of how complex your code is, it ends on machine code. This code is executed on hardware, which is relatively simple, compared to complex tasks your program does. What we observe here is that software, written on DNA/RNA "tapes", can create structures of arbitrary complexity with relatively simple molecular mechanisms. They can replicate itself and "grow" physical objects on nanometer scale without complex fabs, precious elements and all this fine technology needed to produce silicon chips, MEMS etc. With it you can create anything, just need to design it and use suitable "compiler" to generate your RNA/DNA for your micro-bio-fab. IMO AI and what will come after it, will reconcile creationists and Darvinists. It seems that God is not an entity outside of this world, but rather a something we create now and have been created by it already. It started from Large Language Models. It is already written that "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God." The models were created by collecting mass amounts of human data via Internet links, social networks, Android devices etc. They encode humanity and provide necessary input to establish a God, who later "created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him". Hence, it is not an interconnection or similarity. It is just the same thing. 🙂
@MsaMkhize3 ай бұрын
I am interented in finding out what are the two fields ou are doing your civil engineering In and software in. Are you focused on bring software solutions to a specific civil engineering field ?
@goffperu3 ай бұрын
The coolest thing about being an 11M sub KZbinr is that you can read about a cool thing, and then just go talk to the scientist that discovered it.
@aerialbugsmasher3 ай бұрын
...and then add thinly veiled creationist undertones throughout the whole video and push a garbage intelligent design book while simultaneously claiming impartiality and "not taking any sides" thereby having completely insulted and wasted said scientist's times.
@TheRealLyrelia3 ай бұрын
You know, most authors would be happy if anyone contacted them about their work. Especially outside the field. They may not have the time to teach everyone the background, but it's always nice to see interest.
@vibaj163 ай бұрын
@@none-y7x well, they discovered the high detail structure, not the motor itself
@emmet0423 ай бұрын
Oh hey, it's the original comment stolen by the bot I just reported!
@fdphy3 ай бұрын
@@none-y7xif you’ve read the paper you would’ve known that their team show for the first time how the motor work. So yes he discovered that part.
@dr.python2 ай бұрын
*Fun Fact:* Your body’s entire energy also comes from a motor called “ATP synthase enzyme”
@thekeysman676021 күн бұрын
ATP synthase enzyme needs no punctuation, let alone incorrectly quoting nobody at all. And inverted commas implying so-called or supposedly would still be incorrect, because it is what it's called. 🕊️
@dr.python21 күн бұрын
@@thekeysman6760 are you “bot”?
@canUfeelMYface2 күн бұрын
Where is the motor pulling the energy from?
@dr.python2 күн бұрын
@@canUfeelMYface In electron transport chain there is build up of Hydrogen in the inner membrane of Mitochondria, this creates a gradient of hydrogen inside vs outside along with charge, when the hydrogen arrives at ATP synthase complex it gets out turning the turbine which completes addition of phosphate to ADP thus forming ATP
@canUfeelMYface2 күн бұрын
@@dr.python that's smaller than we can see. I've been messed up since I learned that atoms aren't actually things and never really touch one another.
@foosh48093 ай бұрын
300 episodes!!! Congratulations on the huge milestone!
@ilVice3 ай бұрын
As a former computational biologist, I worked a lot with 3D structures and the dynamics of bacterial flagellar filaments. The first thing that blew my mind was the sheer complexity and geometrical symmetry of these structures. No matter how you represent it, wireframe, balls-and-sticks, atom radii, they are beautiful. A masterpiece of mechanical perfection. By the way: at some point, you suggest a strategy to disable the flagellar motor, right? Unfortunately, the human immune system is already pretty good at recognizing and attacking flagellar structures. That's why in the acute phase of the infection, many bacteria have learned to lose their flagella, bundle together in biofilms like in a fortress, and start releasing mucus and other nasty molecules to keep our defenses away. Usually, when bacteria are roaming around is not when people feel sick. Biology is complicated, it's a continuous arms race.
@AndoresuPeresu3 ай бұрын
Interesting! Thank you for the explanation.
@midwesternoutdoorsandnatur82723 ай бұрын
Almost as if created by a creator huh? God is great!!
@AndoresuPeresu3 ай бұрын
@@midwesternoutdoorsandnatur8272 ?
@Marinesniprx3 ай бұрын
Isn't that what made the last corona virus so hard to deal with? And if not what's your take on it?
@ZayRL7l03 ай бұрын
@@AndoresuPeresuhe wasn’t replying to you lol. But you don’t understand, then allow me to give a short explanation. He’s referring to how beautiful the flagellar motor is in all its perfection. So they are saying, GOD created such a complex motor, that there’s no way it happened by chance like the Big Bang.
@hilslamer2 күн бұрын
As a mechanical and manufacturing engineer specializing in automation...this is a revolutionary explanation and I thank you for sharing it in such detailed and authentic fashion. This changes our explanation of everything electrical, and especially anything Tesla-esque. The relation of faith versus understanding, and respect between all "flags" is awesome and I hope everyone cand appreciate it from all "sides". Mitakuye Oyasin
@hypedupdemon3 ай бұрын
The dithering sound effect was spot on 😂
@brentongilmore58533 ай бұрын
For real. Like, does he practice that often? 😂
@courier11sec3 ай бұрын
If some musically creative viewer doesn't sample that for a piece of music I'll be bummed out.
@Vortex001_MLG3 ай бұрын
@@courier11secthe tri-dither has a natural tendency to sound like a pair of E and F# notes chained together. Go on. Have fun with that 😊
@slizer4523 ай бұрын
@@brentongilmore5853 Idk but he was likely present for the tests of that system which probably took months maybe years to perfect.
@RFC35143 ай бұрын
As someone who works in visual effects, we only resort to deliberate dithering when we're lacking in bit depth.
@wullxz3 ай бұрын
It's not only the little motor that's incredible. It's also the methodics that scientists have developed to actually "photograph" these proteins. I've always been in awe with how scientists gather and interpret data. It started with astrophysicists and the vast information they get from "just light". Thank you for not only covering the little motor but also the methods that enabled them to view it! :)
@anteshell3 ай бұрын
"To image", not "to photograph". Photographing is just one imaging technique while "imaging" is the umbrella term for all different methods of imaging, be it using visible light, IR-spectrum, radio-spectrum, x-rays, et cetera.
@wullxz3 ай бұрын
@@anteshell thanks for clarifying
@mikel55823 ай бұрын
@@wullxz Just to add a bit more nuance... As you alluded to, this "result"is the output of dozens, or even hundreds, of scientific studies that were leveraged to build an atomic-level *_model_* of this apparatus. On its own, electron microscopy (EM) cannot yield atomic level data. It is limited by the physics behind the technology. But it can provide insights into molecular morphology. I'll get back to this. In separate studies, structural biologists built atomic level models of individual components using other technologies like X-ray crystallography and biomolecular NMR. Based on the morphology imaged by cryo-EM, the atomic level models are built into that morphology, along with data from other sources and then subjected to incredible amounts of computational modeling to arrive at a structural model that fits the data and known physics. A reasonable question would be "why not just use the atomic resolution techniques to study the whole apparatus?" Without going to deep into the reasoning, I'll just say that those techniques have their own comications. That's why data from many areas of expertise are utilized. While advancements like this draw a lot of public interest, they're often the result of myriad tiny steps by a lot of dedicated scientists who will go relatively unrecognized.
@cyalknight3 ай бұрын
We can't just put a little camera inside a bacterium to film the process live. We have to invent new ways to get the pictures we want. Often stopping the process to be able to get a good still image.
@scottperry95813 ай бұрын
I had the exact same reaction to both the chemotaxis engine and to the layers of research and analysis that made the final imaging product possible. If I weren't in my 70s, I would be tempted to return to college to work in this area.
@handkeez3 ай бұрын
"Even when we're driving here, we're so excited like, what will I find today?" That's how you know someone really enjoys their work.
@Gaming_pro905 күн бұрын
Dude the way you ask questions and genuinely show your interest is absolutely amazing I can really tell how much the other guy appreciated it and was excited to talk ab it
@MarcDonis3 ай бұрын
Small correction... No, the flagellum of a sperm cell does not work with a flagellar motor like bacterial flagella do. In bacteria, the flagellum is rotated by a rotary motor that is powered by the flow of protons or sodium ions across the bacterial cell membrane. In contrast, the flagellum of a sperm cell, known as an undulipodium, operates differently. It moves by a whip-like action powered by the sliding of microtubules against each other. This movement is driven by the motor protein dynein, which uses ATP as an energy source. The dynein arms attached to the microtubules generate force by "walking" along adjacent microtubules, causing them to slide and thus create the bending motion that propels the sperm forward. This type of movement is characteristic of eukaryotic cells and is fundamentally different from the rotary motion seen in bacterial flagella.
@strangelee44003 ай бұрын
'God did it'...at least that's what i got from this video spitting on evolutionary biology.
@MarcDonis3 ай бұрын
@@strangelee4400 yeah well... dude is a Christian, but nobody's perfect! we like him anyway.
@DanielCurrier3 ай бұрын
Correct, I noticed that too. Concerning the need for a designer....well....try to design this as an engineer. The design process is much harder than some think
@Thetruepredictor3 ай бұрын
@@DanielCurrierif this would be incredibly difficult for Engineers to replicate imagine an unintelligent random nuke like explosion in a vacuum some how making this. 😂
@DanielCurrier3 ай бұрын
@@Thetruepredictor correct, I've designed large scale gear pinons before. Harder than many think. This is microscopic in size and has greater complexity than my system
@palpytine3 ай бұрын
No new word is needed, we already have "bacteriostatic". If you're going down this path, you should also do a video about protein pumps, the mechanism that creates that hydrogen ion gradient in the first place and underpins the metabolism of *ALL* living organisms.
@jonathancullis91553 ай бұрын
ATP synthase is another good one. Doesn't bacteriostatic just mean stopping bacterial growth, rather than movement?
@toseltreps11013 ай бұрын
bacteriostatic indeed means inhibited growth/division, not immobility
@pyropulseIXXI3 ай бұрын
They say atp is the energy of life but it is really these proton pumps
@LillianRyanUhl3 ай бұрын
@@toseltreps1101indeed, a better term would probably be like "chemotaxis inhibitor"
@wolflegion_3 ай бұрын
@@LillianRyanUhlchemotaxis inhibitor isn’t really clear enough though, since there are other theoretical ways you could interfere with chemotaxis. For example by interfering with the sensing part. It’s not wrong, maybe just overtly broad.
@cucciolino943 ай бұрын
"Wow! a molecular motor" ATP Synthase: "👁👄👁"
@sphinxtan91583 ай бұрын
Flagellum come relatively late in the evolution of microbes. Part of it evolved from ATP synthase.
@SolaceEasy3 ай бұрын
He was excited bcuz Jesuz.
@dimitrimartiny29773 ай бұрын
ATP synthase is being slept on 😢
@richiecee61863 ай бұрын
i thought it was an ATP Synthase video
@benjaminlasseter89293 ай бұрын
Don't knock someone just discovering this. We biochemists or molecular biologists learned this in undergrad biochemistry, but he is correct is showing how astounding this system really is. We ought to be staring in wonder at these molecular motor systems, not just accepting them as ordinary and uninteresting. We ought to be filled with delight at the variations on the ATP synthase motor that nature has provided. And the efficiency of them... I still can't get my head around just how perfect they are in their efficiency. If I could get a lawnmower engine with that kind of efficiency of energy to work, I would be moving loaded freight trains across the country on the fuel I would use in that lawnmower. So yeah, this system ought to be highlighted and celebrated, and we should be considering how many other molecular applications there are of this system, should we choose to attempt to use them for engineering purposes. I think our medical field would be the first to really transform.
@rain-wj6vvАй бұрын
I love how happy he is doing his job and relating it to his dad/grandad and how fresh and exciting they both make this content feel
@HT-vd4in3 ай бұрын
There is also the ATP-Syntase, Which is also a motor that uses the protongradient to spin and it converts the spin to chemical energy
@grumpusmaximus94463 ай бұрын
Synthase
@vanwan76103 ай бұрын
Got my degree in biology and thought that’s what he was gonna be talking about when I saw the thumbnail
@romanes_eunt_domus3 ай бұрын
Such a fascinating little thing. We're powered by quadrillions of tiny electric motors :D
@GhostEmblem3 ай бұрын
Thats what I thought this video waas going to be about.
@zippersocks3 ай бұрын
That’s what this reminded me of too. Charge gradient and a spinny wheel.
@BenTajer893 ай бұрын
Small correction, you suggest the flagellar motor is integral to the creation of human life, but the flagella on human sperm is a eukaryotic flagella (technically a long cillia) and works through a completely different mechanism with a bunch of microtubules that slide past eachother causing it to spring and whip around. It's a very different mechanism.
@sozisalad50113 ай бұрын
It just shows he has no idea and wants to shove his religion into it
@Verrisin3 ай бұрын
this motor is indeed fascinating. Perhaps the most interesting part is that we want to break it. XD
@Verrisin3 ай бұрын
@@sozisalad5011 curse you God for giving Salmonella this cool motor !
@kevinwells97513 ай бұрын
True, however without these bacteria human life wouldn't exist because they perform a ton of crucial functions in our digestive system, so in that sense it is integral to life
@Verrisin3 ай бұрын
@@kevinwells9751 I am not aware of any Salmonella species that are not pathogens.
@arghan2343 ай бұрын
I really appreciate how a fair amount of time was dedicated to explaining expression and purification. Sometimes it feels as though sample prep is underappreciated vs actual imaging.
@staynalive6606 күн бұрын
And this was created through random, undirected processes? It looks to me like the Master Engineer created this. 🙌🏼🙌🏼
@aslightbreeze3 ай бұрын
LOL - "chemotaxis is so cool, reminds me of missiles I've designed"
@asystole_3 ай бұрын
Really disturbing moment. He's so proud of helping murder innocent civilians in the middle east and elsewhere. Makes me think Americans are beyond help.
@Thezuule13 ай бұрын
Praise the Lord and pass the ammunition!
@thecolaman773 ай бұрын
As a former submariner from Alabama I audibly cheered when Mr. Singh said his father was a submariner in the Indian submarine force. Bubblehead camaraderie is global! Love your videos Destin keep it going. War Eagle!!
@Jeremy_Fielding3 ай бұрын
This "motor" really is fascinatingly complex. I also find it marvelous that a tiny factory can crank out thousands of these motors like an assembly line. As long as it has instructions! LOL Freaking amazing the engineering that is happening at the microscopic level. A machine that can create machines... I would love to tour that factory 😁
@jamesclerkmaxwell80203 ай бұрын
Love your videos Jeremy - this motor screams "design" imho. Its just as if we discovered some advanced alien technology at the basis of life. No way billions of years of "undirected processes" can come up with this. Even eternity could not do it randomly. Just my totally unbiased opinion 🙂
@jasonhoover33533 ай бұрын
Now that's another request I have for Him.
@jeffsmith72952 ай бұрын
OBVIOUSLY IT'S CREATION BY GOD ! READ, THE BIBLE, ROMANS, CH. 1 v 19-20 !
@jeffsmith72952 ай бұрын
@@jamesclerkmaxwell8020: GOD ! READ, ROMANS, CH. 1 v 19-20 !
@Gaston-Melchiori2 ай бұрын
Millions of years of evolution can produce really amazing things.
@traciecasey471812 күн бұрын
I'm a hairdresser and was directed to watch The Inner life of Cell Animation because I took a class of the Science of Hair. I love chemistry and went down the rabbit hole and found your video. I love how you used your engineering back ground to make analogies to understand what you were seeing. I subscribed and will be watching mor of your videos.
@user-jb9qi2bt2w3 ай бұрын
I used to be a biologist who designed new kinds of microscopes and microscopy techniques. The PI has it correct in saying that the imaging techniques have enabled new discoveries. We went from imaging single entities to a more systemic level. The next step that will revolutionize our understanding is imaging systems while the systems are actually working.
@CRneuАй бұрын
What's also crazy is that as our processing power increases we can actually extrapolate a TON of data without actually seeing it. I work in a part of semiconductor manufacturing/research where we use mathematics to basically enhance scanning electron microscopy well beyond our usual resolution. We can do this based on past data of how these angstrom level structures tend to form in different environments. So if we see one structure we can confirm a set of data which makes the likelihood of something else also happening. It's really fascinating. It all comes together to make SEM much quicker and easier to use.
@user-jb9qi2bt2wАй бұрын
@@CRneu This sounds a bit like PALM and STORM in light microscopy to overcome the usual diffraction limits and reach super resolution. Not sure if it is any useful to you, given that you material guys are usually much further technique wise than in life sciences, but it might be neat to know.
@rvs13 ай бұрын
Hi, I previously worked as a biochemist and can shed some light on the process of "fitting proteins onto a location of the flagellum motor" mentioned around 22:18. Each protein is basically a string of amino-acids which is folded in a certain way, partially by physical or electrochemical properties of the amino-acid, sometimes by use of enzymes. When you unwind a protein its possible to sequence the amino acid revealing what the string looks like. When you combine the length of a protein string with each amino acid property you can for a large part predict where and how it folds in on itself. This means that once you sequence a handful of proteins that together make the flagellum motor complex it in theory is quite straightforward to puzzle the pieces into its respective locations based on the predicted "form" that the protein string would take.
@Wishbone19773 ай бұрын
Yes, the video skipped rather quickly over that part, or at least didn't go into a lot of detail. The thing is, in order to make all the copies of the motor, what they must have done is to isolate the genetic sequence which is the blueprint for the motor from Salmonella, then injected that sequence into E. Coli in order to have it make lots of copies of the motor. So they should already know the amino acid sequences involved, which should make it much easier to map the whole thing.
@Artcore1033 ай бұрын
This prediction is by no means simple or straightforward, hence for many years we've had the computer program Folding At Home, which continues to run to this day even with incredible computing power applied to the protein folding problem/solutions, the solutions are still being calculated and found. There are seemingly near infinite possibilities.
@agradeepmukherjee82693 ай бұрын
As a structural biologist myself, I can say that the work that they do is amazing. The sheer amount of work that it takes to go from programming our little E.coli friend to make our proteins and then purifying them to a level when you can use it for a Cryo EM and ET at Glacios or Krios (the big daddy of cryo electron microscopes) to reconstruct the structure at angstrom levels is just immense. Huge respect to everyone who contributed to this video and made it simple for people without a molecular biology background. ❤
@thelanaden10 күн бұрын
Congratulations on 300. Here's many more. God bless you 🙏🏾
@JJ-cc2eh3 ай бұрын
Structural biologist here. Pretty good job explaining how it works. On the question how we know where what goes: sometimes you can see the start of a chain, and we know how long each amino acid is, so it is just a matter of fitting them one by one.
@dj-kq4fz3 ай бұрын
Please don't underrate what must be a challenging and rewarding science! I, for one, am impressed!
@GodzillaGoesGaga3 ай бұрын
@@dj-kq4fz I don’t think this is underrating but a good explanation of how microbiologists do the find and fit of protein molecules. Great explanation. Basically a 3d jigsaw where you might only know what one corner looks like.
@oldmech6193 ай бұрын
I waited 50 yrs for this. I remember back a few years when they discovered the tail rotated by holding the tail then the body rotated. They always thought the tail whipped back and forth. The science of micro biology is impressive.
@JJ-cc2eh3 ай бұрын
@@GodzillaGoesGaga Exactly. The blue mesh visible in the program around minute 23 is a representation of the experimental data; we can see structures on the atomic level! Working with these results and trying to model the protein is a very cool job. And I never said it was easy ;)
@emptyshirt3 ай бұрын
@pentachronic like a 3d jjigsaw puzzle where the pieces are floppy/sticky/springy chains, and there are 5000 wrong pieces in the pile.
@HappyMathDad3 ай бұрын
Destin got amazed by the engine. He didn't really stop to think about the 100 times more amazing part. That bacteria factory is able to take instructions and build an engine.
@salicyl33503 ай бұрын
Basically every cell has these sort of "factories". Theyre all capable of building proteins. The DNA (or rather, the mRNA) tells the "factory" in what order it should combine amino-acids to produce proteins. Thats basically how the covid vaccine works. It gave your bodies cells some mRNA that told the factories the order in which they had to assemble amino-acids to produce the spike protein, which then triggered an immune response.
@FRN20133 ай бұрын
Incredible designs.
@Recklessjoe7473 ай бұрын
I've always been amazed that there is so much discussion and content about the finished mechanisms that allow cells to function; yet almost no visual representation of how these proteins are decoded from DNA (or equivalent) and constructed. I would guess that the nature of these factories makes them practically impossible to preserve intact in the way they have with these more durable motor structures.
@kitsuneneko25673 ай бұрын
@Recklessjoe747 protein folding is an amazingly complex thing and it's still very poorly understood.
@timothyperrigoue39973 ай бұрын
After so many billions of years of bits finding bits that might work, with failures not making it to the next level, it seems inevitable that something elegant might come into being. They do appear to be wonderful Designs, or Creations... and perhaps they are. Yet I am even more astounded that differences between Entropy and the Energetic can form such functionality given enough Time, perhaps all by itself, like the way the grass grows when I am not looking... and Dang I need to go mow the yard AGAIN.
@needleonthevinyl3 ай бұрын
I love it when research scientists on the cutting edge of their field are able to communicate their topic in simple terms
@Mastermindyoung143 ай бұрын
If you can't break it down in simple terms, you might not understand it deeply
@heegj3 ай бұрын
@@theultimatereductionist7592 he said "Might" so he is technicaly correct :P
@lagautmd3 ай бұрын
Exactly. I tell my students that they should describe a process or phenomenon in terms that their quite smart grandparent, who is not embedded in the jargon, what is going on both accurately and succinctly. That's when they know they actually understand something.
@goofoffchannel3 ай бұрын
Youre an ass@@theultimatereductionist7592
@nathannatchevincent3 ай бұрын
@@theultimatereductionist7592 No! Mastermind is correct. The proof for the poincare conjecture is PAGES long, but can you explain it in simple terms to a 5 year old such that they get the idea of what it proves? Absolutely! If you cannot explain it in simple terms, you do not fully understand it, q.e.d.
@JustThatGuy011210 күн бұрын
Being a Patron is so awesome man! keep going at this pace!
@Torqueyeel3 ай бұрын
Software developer here, it's interesting that the process they use to generate 3D images is essentially the same as photogrammetry. This is the process of taking pictures of objects, like a rock, from many angles and stitching them together to create a 3D model for things like video games and movies. The idea to do this at the scale of an electron microscope is extremely clever. The rest of the things I learned in this video are truly mind-blowing. Thanks Destin!
@SoneNando3 ай бұрын
Like ultrasound imaging being similar to seismic surveying
@rogercruz15473 ай бұрын
I've seen this at the dentist, I didn't have to byte into cement-like modeling clay in a while now, they just scan it with a small camera attached to a mirror.
@GregMoress3 ай бұрын
Another Software developer here, this is the first time I've heard of photogrammetry. 😁 I'm guessing Torquyeel works in animation or 3D modeling.
@paulpease82543 ай бұрын
Yeah. It’s actually tomography, so more like a PET scan. The object being imaged is transparent to elections, so kind of like 3D x-ray image of the object. Pretty similar though. It’s very challenging because electrons are high energy and damage the sample, so the amount of information you can get from one particle is low, so they typically image thousands of individual particles and average. In the photogrammetry example, it would be like if your object exploded after each exposure so you need to build the 3D image from many, hopefully identical, copies.
@defyent3 ай бұрын
What do you think about the fact that they are using pictures of separate items to create a single model? Surely this must add to inaccuracy.
@bobthegoat70903 ай бұрын
8:05 A shame that Destin interrupted him here, but I found some research that explains the fascinating research: Bacteria moves in a run-and-tumble pattern. During a run, they go straight and the flagella and "motor" goes counterclockwise. During a tumble the bacteria tumbles and shifts direction. Now of course the tumble will be random, but you can still archive a route towards food with this randomness. What the bacteria does is that when it detects an increase in concentration of the food they have longer run periods so they will continue mostly in that direction, however when it detects a shift towards lower concentrations it does the opposite and increases tumble time to change direction. This will of course result in a sum movement towards the food. Amazing.
@gama11233 ай бұрын
I feel he's always trying to impress whoever he's talking to with his own engineering knowledge, they are the experts just let them explain it.
@ggs49893 ай бұрын
@@gama1123He isn't trying to impress. He's trying to be active in the discussion and relate it to other things that viewers might be able to draw connections. There's not much point to him sitting there and having the person talking the entire time. You can watch lectures if you don't want dialogue.
@gama11233 ай бұрын
@@ggs4989 ok
@efafe49723 ай бұрын
I understood that from the video... i dont remember if he interrupted but the information got to my head so i really dont think whatever he did stopped the communication of that idea at all. maybe you just didn't get it the way it was worded.
@kevinjoy1553 ай бұрын
I think I understood what you just said from the video.
@camelloy3 ай бұрын
For all those wondering why the scientists chose E. coli to look at this it’s because it is the model organism for microbiology and molecular biology (yeast also but not as much). It’s easily manipulatable and is commonly used to assess a variety of molecular interactions, mechanisms, and is routinely an intermediate in generating DNA constructs.
@AndoresuPeresu3 ай бұрын
Thanks, great having more context!
@johnsmith19263 ай бұрын
E. coli has fast generation cycles (you get quick results), can be easily grown (you don't spend a fortune fro your research) on uncomplicated inexpensive growth media and yes, it can be easily manipulated (you need less attempts transform them). Because of that, researchers like to use it for al kinds of research. If many researchers focus on the same organism and are not studying the organism itself but use it to understand general principles, this is called a model organism. So the reason they picked E. coli is that it fits their purpose and therefore it is their model organism. E. coli being a model organism for countless other researchers is not the real causation, although the infrastructure like efficient transformation methods developed around it definitely plays a role. Nevertheless, causality goes in this direction: Attractive organism for specific research not focused on the organism itself -> research conducted employing this organism -> calling the organism a model / model organism.
@louisesamchapman64289 күн бұрын
How much evidence is required, how many wonders, how many laws, how much fine tuning ? ...to Connect the dots of Creation.
@Origin8203 ай бұрын
I’m studying molecular biology: it’s so so so cool that you have started covering these topics, I find biology to be one of the most fascinating parts of the universe
@andregon43663 ай бұрын
69 likes. Nice 😎
@texvanwinkle3 ай бұрын
Considering we could only be studying it because of molecular biology, it certainly seems like we *ought* to be fascinated by it.
@Narcissist863 ай бұрын
@@texvanwinkleyou can say that for any discipline...
@walkingmonument3 ай бұрын
Life amazes at every turn
@sunnythegreat96173 ай бұрын
Biology is fascinating, but the most fascinating part of the Universe is definitely Quantum Mechanics and Particle Physics
@kartickshirur96483 ай бұрын
“I’m just going around asking questions. That’s all these videos are.” This is exactly why I’ve loved your videos over the years. Congratulations on the 300th episode. Keep up the good work.
@carpandrei74933 ай бұрын
That's how you learn! You ask questions, especially to the right people, and absorb the answers. And that's just the first step.
@JesusPlsSaveMeАй бұрын
@@carpandrei7493 Where are you going after you die? What happens next? Have you ever thought about that? Repent today and give your life to Jesus Christ to obtain eternal salvation. Tomorrow may be too late my brethen😢. Hebrews 9:27 says "And as it is appointed unto man once to die, but after that the judgement
@yourheadisround3 ай бұрын
One of my favorite things about Destin's channel is his ability to find the people who LOVE what they do. Who are genuinely excited to be doing that work. Whether it's making film at Kodak, or people uncovering the secrets of cells. Just fantastic.
@modelenginerding69963 ай бұрын
I noticed he had grease/oil under his fingernails in one of the shots. The best engineers are always working with stuff!
@1bengrubb3 ай бұрын
Totally agree... people that love what they are creating or what they are discovering is soo amazing.. I'm not into sports but there are people that know every stat of every player on the team---not a lot into guitars but there are those who hone the Brain/finger interface the create amazing music. Our Brains plus passion/ambition/fear makes us experts in all kinds of stuff. Its interesting that passion/ambition/fear focuses the computing power of the brain. Unlike a computer that is 100% compute power on any topic----the human computer varies compute power/focus/duration by topic. Boredom does not engage compute power......hmmm
@AR-ml9eo3 ай бұрын
Never forget that these are the wonderful people that the racists tell us should be excluded from "white only" America.
@smartereveryday3 ай бұрын
@@modelenginerding6996 My tractor steering cylinder went out. Had been working on it.
@dangerfly3 ай бұрын
@@smartereveryday Destin, if you embraced global culture instead of southern culture do you think you'd still be religious?
@reynevaАй бұрын
Thank you Destin! Big love!
@tango_doggy3 ай бұрын
I heard about this from that intelligent design vs evolution court case.. The intelligent design people were arguing it had to be designed because of how intricately dependent every individual part is on each other, so if you remove a single part it completely stops working. But the evolution side showed that similar structures with missing parts were also being used by bacteria, except for completely different purposes. It's like the mouse trap example - if even a single part is removed it no longer functions as a mouse trap, but you only need 2-3 of the original parts for it to still work as a tie clip
@tango_doggy3 ай бұрын
Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District is the name of the case
@LarryStonster3 ай бұрын
Part of the argument that's intelligent design used against Evolution was that several of the parts that make up this motor are not found in any other living creature therefore it's not like a hair becoming a feather. Furthermore the development of this motor is from the inside out and that also makes it extremely improbable then this little motor evolved.
@meinteybergen46173 ай бұрын
The view to see the cell as a machine with parts that have single functions is also an oversimplification. There are many proteins that are not solid, have different shapes and many different functions in a cell. Which in my opinion makes it even a bigger of a mystery how all these interesting things can emerge out of jiggly strings and blobs made of amino acids. I like your story above, however I think it just makes sense of where the single parts (proteins) might have come from. Not how the organism came to be and how it can function.
@jellewijckmans48363 ай бұрын
@@LarryStonster Hairs never became feathers. Feathers are an adaption of the process that creates scales. Creationists have argued that tons of structures were irreducibly complex and for almost all of them we have found them to be plenty complex but highly reducable. Feather ironically being one of them. It's just god of the gaps with a more scientifically interesting gap.
@user-fy7ri8gu8l3 ай бұрын
@@LarryStonster they are found all over. It's a lie, both in modern evo terms and in sub-components of other parts in the cell walls.
@nithinb48083 ай бұрын
I love this channel so much for one thing and that is the fact that Dustin understands whatever he is listening to and moreover understands the person who he is talking to on a higher level than most people and asks the right question in the right way. Thank you Dustin for your videos which always opens up the viewer something to learn. ❤❤
@kentmackey27173 ай бұрын
Totally agree! He always builds a nice bridge toward understanding the concepts being discussed. (It's Destin, by the way 😉)
@lasagnahog76953 ай бұрын
A higher understanding that leads to intelligent design?
@BiggestMarph3 ай бұрын
I love when two different subject matter experts get together and geek over each other’s discoveries/ inventions. It’s truly profound.
@phiiz3r3 ай бұрын
I don't love how he uses the word design instead of evolve.
@BiggestMarph3 ай бұрын
@@phiiz3r we can do this, but let’s be civil. Neo-Darwinism is unproven and not observable. The hypotheses have gone unproven and are near untestable. Logically then, how can you believe in the neodarwinist understanding of evolution with no evidence? Don’t confuse adaption with random mutation. But I’m baffled how someone can look at a molecular two way motor made of amino acids that is perfectly designed and go, “yeah, intelligence didn’t create that.” Furthermore It’s unwise to think science and theism (in my case Christianity) are at odds. Science is how we understand God’s creation. The pioneers of the scientific method did so with the belief that God created the universe in a way we can understand if we look hard enough.
@mikel55823 ай бұрын
The host is a smart guy and no doubt an SME in his field but he's not an SME in structural or evolutionary biology. He is a great explainer and did a good job of covering a lot of the salient information but nowhere close to an SME level of detail.
@BiggestMarph3 ай бұрын
@@phiiz3r well… I did reply with a solid argument but KZbin blackholed my comment. Gotta love censorship.
@Hamdad3 ай бұрын
@@phiiz3r Evolution is a design process, just not an intelligently directed one
@forestjohnson74744 күн бұрын
0:26 "Thats a spiny thing"....yep you're a fellow Engineer
@leosnips3 ай бұрын
Prashant's passion for his work is incredible, love to see how excited he is about discovering things.
@kdl03 ай бұрын
Heck yeah, I'm glad we have academics working on stuff like this. I hope they are rewarded for the sake of the science, not because some company wants to monetize it, corrupting the otherwise natural process of continued discovery
@TexusNoe3652473 ай бұрын
20:30 He’s talking about photogrammetry!!! This process is AMAZING!!! Dustin, you got to make a video about this!!!!
@mumakin13 ай бұрын
Another amazing thing about this video is that Destin has built up a reputation such that he can just call up any random reasercher anywhere and they take the time to explain their work to him. That is huge intellectual capitol.
@Dee-nonamnamrson87183 ай бұрын
It's great for the researchers as well. The most important part of testing a hypothesis is communicating the results.
@gentrywalker3 ай бұрын
Destin is the Intellect Capitol.
@PaperScarecrow3 ай бұрын
@@Dee-nonamnamrson8718 Also helps to bring additional exposure to their work, which can help fund future endeavors
@Noxeus19963 ай бұрын
And he's using his platform to promote creationism and the US military lol
@bombombalu3 ай бұрын
@@Noxeus1996 well he worked for the military
@9xqspx621 күн бұрын
I didn't expect this video to be so awesome. Talking directly with the researchers is gold. They are doing such a great job. I wish they would get more funding (take it from military for instance...).
@boscobaracus18233 ай бұрын
ATP synthase makes us all tick, you should look at this enzyme too!
@pierrerioux26473 ай бұрын
I was also going to mention ATP synthase too.
@SnackMuay3 ай бұрын
Yeah! I’m curious what the similarities and differences are. He mentioned the protein that works like a needle and I wonder if these 3 structures are built with the same amino acids or if they’re a case of several different amino acid combinations converging to a similar shape.
@vivipyt3 ай бұрын
Oh the Fo and F1 domains with PMF...there's so much interesting in it!!!
@k1ngjulien_3 ай бұрын
the mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell 🗣️📢💥🔥🔥
@hanifarroisimukhlis59893 ай бұрын
I love ATP Synthase too!
@SVanHutten3 ай бұрын
I stumbled upon those motors around 1996: there was a small section about them in the university textbook Brock´s _Biology of Microorganisms_ . To this day I remember the drawing of the motor components, very similar but not as detailed as those shown in the video. I was amazed upon learning about the flagellar motors, but even more amazed because the general public and the media seem to ignore them completely. Another interesting fact: The proteins that made up the flagellum are produced inside the cell and "pumped" through the motor hollow core; then they self-assemble to build the flagellum, which is a hollow and flexible tube that grows up from its tip. I have enjoyed very much this video showing the current status of science knowledge about this topic.
@pedro42053 ай бұрын
Actually, this mechanism isn't ignored, it was a key part on banning intelligent design from public schools
@emonvidaly3 ай бұрын
@@pedro4205huh?
@Soken503 ай бұрын
So what you're saying is that flagella are rotating self assembling inflatable tubemen? Fascinating!
@ironassbrown3 ай бұрын
great explaination, love it
@ERECTED_MONUMENT3 ай бұрын
@@emonvidaly Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District. Basically some clowns in a school district wanted to teach intelligent design and brought forward flagellar motors, then proceeded to get destroyed so thoroughly that they resorted to one of their favorite tactics: death threats, before basically giving up and paying about 1 million in legal fees.
@raidtheferry3 ай бұрын
The first 5 minutes of this video alone are mind blowing. Prashant is clearly a smart guy but the engineering translation you provided really helped me see how that all works. Awesome video!!
@BogdanTestsSoftware5 күн бұрын
As an engineer at heart, I feel this is like watching birds fly: after 400 years after Leonardo figured how birds fly, someone made an airplane. We will try to replicate it and it will be incredible. Imagine delivering medicine navigating sensors and what have you. Purification oh?
@MrJaffjunior3 ай бұрын
You said something wrong at 22:08. It is not the shapes of amino acids that make the shapes of proteins, Rather it is the electrical attraction and repulsion between amino-acids in a chain of polypeptides that make it fold into its final shape. Amino acids bundle up into peptides. A strand of DNA is transcribed to a strand of RNA, which is then translated to a strand of peptides ( a.k.a. polypeptide) Due to the form atoms try to share electrons to make bonds, ions are then formed. The attraction and repulsion between these ions make the strand of polypeptides twist and turn to minimize energy. This string of peptides, suffers folding due to internal forces. The result is a 3d shaped protein.
@adebicara3 ай бұрын
@@MrJaffjunior it's not completely wrong. The thing is that we still don't know how exactly the protein folds. Principally we know, but not in great detail.
@advidshopper3 ай бұрын
I second this. Also I thought this was widely known over 5 years ago. I'm confused
@adebicara3 ай бұрын
@@advidshopper and the 22:08 didn't explain protein folding, it explained how to map protein density with amino acids. Yes, that's been known for a long time.
@SigToyArts3 ай бұрын
“attraction and repulsion between the ions” is the closest I’ve ever gotten to understanding the shape of peptides…. Ty!
@advidshopper3 ай бұрын
@@adebicara which I should add is the emphasis of the video that mechanical movement on the micron scale draws similarities to prenanovision motion design. Evolution over long time is extremely underrated. It beat human designers hundreds of millions of years ago.
@limbeboy73 ай бұрын
Someone already mentioned that the reason its so efficient is friction, heat and physics works differently at the molecular level.
@YourCommonSinner3 ай бұрын
😂 everything is at a molecular level
@xthesayuri57563 ай бұрын
@@YourCommonSinner 3IQ comment
@MrFreakHeavy3 ай бұрын
Life uses the microscopic and quantum world very efficiently. It's ridiculously cool.
@orka166053 ай бұрын
@@YourCommonSinner no
@YourCommonSinner3 ай бұрын
@@xthesayuri5756 whether you like it or not molecules are everywhere interacting and reacting with one another. Just cause you don’t see it, doesn’t mean it isn’t happening.
@9Rollotomasi3 ай бұрын
Excuse me while I engineerify your biology.🤣
@hoodio3 ай бұрын
biology IS chemical engineering
@smokingcheddar3 ай бұрын
*biomedical engineering
@KenLieck3 ай бұрын
Wouldn't "his biology" be autobiological? Which would make SED's reason (aka MO) to do that a matter of... auto-motive engineerifying?
@SubhraneelMaji-bv2wd3 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂😂
@thulyblu54863 ай бұрын
Well, engineers are an outcome of evolution xD. Evolution has no limit on complexity. The only thing that matters for evolution is that it works reliably. If that's a super complex structure on top of another, fused with a third one, combine it with neural networks and many neural networks form a social structure together where ideas evolve to a point where engineering is born - then that's extremely hyper mega complex - but it works. And that's the *only* thing that matter for evolution.
@NotSomeJustinWithoutAMoustacheАй бұрын
The energy, zeal, and childlike joy and curiosity Destin has in this video is so infectious I can't stop smiling myself throughout this video. Thanks for educating us about flagellar motors!
@Scrobbles3 ай бұрын
Should have called the second channel, “Smarter Every Other Day”.
@flamake693 ай бұрын
Or "Smarter Than Yesterday"
@SuperTinyTurtle3 ай бұрын
Smarter Every Night
@JazzFM803 ай бұрын
Smarterer Every Day
@greasemonkeychris41283 ай бұрын
Even Smarter Every Day
@zettaiengineer4202Ай бұрын
Smarter Every Day except the Sabbath
@gcorriveau68643 ай бұрын
As an airline pilot, I had a guest in the flight deck one day (back when we could do that) who was a molecular biologist researcher at a local university. He expressed wonder at the complexities of our flight deck and aircraft. I remarked that what he worked on every day must be a thousand times more complex! We were both in wonder and awe of these things that we humans (in the case of an aircraft) and ??? (you fill in the blank) have made in the cellular structures!! I love your encouragement here to "Not defend a flag," but just look and ponder!... Thanks for all this - it is so absolutely amazing!
@biomaven41243 ай бұрын
I have a PhD in Molecular and Cell Biology. Let me say this: you did an incredible job describing so many complex ideas. Simply amazing!
@tyharris99943 ай бұрын
I am NOT a phd in anything including cell biology or molecules. I am but a lowly mechanical technician who just took a course on industrial electricity. What I am seeing here is a reversible electric motor complete with gears, races, shaft, bearings, variable speed transmission, and mated parts like rotors and stators that have to fit perfectly into each other for any of it to function. Come on. Surely this is a designed system. How on earth would these individual components be formed as part of other evolved systems in the precise measurements / dimensions required to somehow all be brought together all at once and create this functioning apparatus? I am not religious. I believe in evolution. I also have eyes and believe what I see and appear to be seeing a designed device. Has anybody identified the individual components and specified where they were created independently?
@victortaveira82713 ай бұрын
@@tyharris9994 Evolution is algorithm which best case solution spread to next generation trying to find what it's more advantageous using things already there. It's so powerful that computers scientists designed one of the most powerful AI algorithm, genetic algorithm. Biomimetics covers a lot of that and we could use more
@Babaroga7773 ай бұрын
@@tyharris9994 Billions and billions of years of trial and error, complex life forms did not emerge overnight. It seems to me that even very intelligent people often forget this fact.
@gottagoMS1233 ай бұрын
@@tyharris9994That's exactly what evolution is. It takes so long and so, so, so many iterations of selection. Bacteria that developed prototype of with very weak of motility from random chance ends up surving much better than others, and ones that mutates a more updated version that works a bit better, survives a bit better and outcompetes it's older generation. These bacteria doubles like veery thirty minutes (in log phase) , and think of how long they have existed. This kind of bacteria has evolved from the first prototype of motility to what it has now, like a rocket from Mark 1 to Mark 6, it is Mark 1 to Mark whatever trillions for these bacteria. It is a long time and by chance and how it optimizes their survival in a harsh world out here.
@davidlamb11073 ай бұрын
Because it didn't start out that way. You're looking at version 50 trillion of it, and ignoring all the versions that led to its development and which were superceded by a better version that came later, outcompeted, and replaced it.
@snsimpson012 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this video Destin! I really appreciate your insight and passion for this topic.
@connorsturgeon88633 ай бұрын
I'm a mechanical engineer and one of my best friends is a bio guy (he has like two Master's degrees and is pursuing a PhD--he's wicked smart). When we lived together he would oftentimes find papers of the mechanics of microorganisms and show me the kind of "engineering" that has already been used in biology. Really cool stuff
@AndrewFosterSheff693 ай бұрын
By an intelligent creator YHVH God.
@paulpease82543 ай бұрын
@@AndrewFosterSheff69 except there no evidence of a creator and plenty evidence that contradicts the hypothesis of intelligent design in biology. Religion is toxic to humanity.
@markbrown44423 ай бұрын
Lol my boy here is wicked smart. Sounds so cool in a Sothie accent
@elkippy3 ай бұрын
@@AndrewFosterSheff69 lol, no
@plwadodveeefdv3 ай бұрын
@@AndrewFosterSheff69your God, right? Not that evil Allah guy
@ryanhampson6733 ай бұрын
“The implications for a bio mechanical motor are insane “ Every cell in my body right now converting ATP into ADP: Bruh…really?
@AndoresuPeresu3 ай бұрын
My thought exactly!
@ockertoustesizem12343 ай бұрын
fax
@YouAreStillNotablaze3 ай бұрын
I suspect this guy's view of the physical world isn't based solely on science.
@volovodov3 ай бұрын
@@YouAreStillNotablaze Why would it be? It's impossible to operate based on facts alone.
@klauszweig67093 ай бұрын
well the motor thing converts ADP into ATP, but yes, every cell also converts ATP to ADP
@jacobfarrow70963 ай бұрын
One of my favorite things is when Destin speaks with someone who is very knowledgeable and passionate, you can tell they want to geek out over the topic, but they question how smart this KZbinr actually is. And then without fail in his videos, Destin will show how smart he is, and the expert perks up and the vibe of the video changes immediately.
@johndalzell9043 ай бұрын
Yes, that struck me too, how he quickly related the biased random walk of the bacteria to his own work on using biased dithering of the control fins to improve the accuracy of guided missiles. Then Prash had an 'Oh yes' moment. Prash also had an intuitive feel for how much detail the audience could handle. Nicely done by both guys.
@JiveDadson3 ай бұрын
Watch to the end. He demonstrates how indoctrinated and gullible he is.
@jacobfarrow70963 ай бұрын
@@JiveDadson Destin is the very much the opposite of gullible. He uses his knowledge and communication skills to breakdown complicated things and explains them to others so they can be knowledgeable as well. He urges people to think critically. If Destin wishes to think god created these things then so be it, I might not agree with him. But my opinion holds just as much weight as his does.
@stevemawer8482 ай бұрын
Destin very cleverly sort-of acts dumb and teases information out so the experts have to explain things so we ordinary mortals to understand (apologies any non-ordinary mortals reading this!).
@kickass14372 ай бұрын
Wait so… the blueprint to a motor was in our balls?
@blackibis61353 ай бұрын
Destin!! If THIS was a surprise and a wonder, you should do a video on the structures of the ATP Synthase! As a fellow Mechanical Engineer, I was blown away by the concept that bio-motors festoon our mitochondrial surfaces and power, basically, fuel refineries in a triple-headed assembly line!
@koharaisevo36663 ай бұрын
I call it the motor that powers all life!
@Piocoto1233 ай бұрын
As a chemist, molecular biololgy blows my mind away, we struggle to synthezise a 30 atom molecule while every living thing constantly produces insanely complex and biomechanically working supra molecules all the time. The DNA replicating complex is an equally fascinating example
@AffordBindEquipment3 ай бұрын
Absolutely incredible what millions of years of random non-directional mutations can come up with.
@JakeKim-lq9bu3 ай бұрын
Makes me feel like most of the fancy technologies humans developed in the past thousand years are just macro versions of what had been under development for a billion years, just on a smaller length scale. We're all possible because of replicable and evolvable instructions encoded in DNA and RNA. Despite all our fancy tools we've created using language and sharing of blueprints of useful tools, we're only just now scratching the surface for self-replicating and self-improving tools. I'd imagine we'd see another huge shift in society, like we've seen during the industrial revolution, as we develop tools that become better suited to pre-defined tasks over time and make its own improved copies the way all living things do to survive on the cellular level.
@Soken503 ай бұрын
It makes a lot of sense though, we're using big honking machines expending a lot of energy to try and control all the parameters required to assemble nanoscopic structures while cells have all the nanoscopic tools in-house to do the same with less energy than a tiny LED. We're cutting a tiny paper snowflake garland with garden shears while cells use scissors.
@dacummins333 ай бұрын
@@AffordBindEquipmentActually, it's been mathematically proven that "random mutations" could produce such results, as only 1 in 10^-77 "random mutations" can produce just 1 viable mutation - and even the probability of that being a beneficial m is mutation is almost as unlikely. Hard to believe anyone can dispute intelligent design, at this point. How difficult it must be to ignore the evidence if intelligent design at Every Turn. I can only imagine the level of narcissism and denial - the sheer amount of willpower it must take to dispute the obvious... Imagine where we could be as a society if all that effort denying and protesting the obvious was directed in a positive direction. Sad.
@captainamerica38143 ай бұрын
@@AffordBindEquipment😅
@samhiatt3 ай бұрын
Prashant seems like such an awesome person. Thanks for doing this interview, inviting him to share the fascinating science that he apparently gets so much satisfaction by advancing. I ❤ listening to scientists like this; it's a unique joy of being human.
9:36 I remember learning about the "Blob" in my microbiology course in college back in '81! We knew at the time there was this barrel-like structure of globular proteins that rotated and caused the flagellum to turn, allowing the bacterium to move. We certainly did not have the amazing level of detail the good Dr. is showing. Simply amazing!
@AxyzGrid3 ай бұрын
Everyone: Going off about how cool the flagellar motor is. ATP Synthase: Am I a joke to you?!?!?
@tyharris99943 ай бұрын
Micro-tubules inside neurons using quantum entanglement to transfer information are cooly filing their nails and looking unimpressed.
@EthelredHardrede-nz8yv3 ай бұрын
@@tyharris9994 That is not supported by evidence. It is pure speculation and since entanglement is short term even at near zero K it is simply not likely. Microtubules have a real know function. Structural. I am sorry but it is exceedingly like that Dr Penrose is wrong on this.
@davidmella1174Ай бұрын
It's also interesting how that motor uses photons too
@NozomuYume3 ай бұрын
"A motor made out of molecules." -- I'd be more impressed by a motor that WASN'T made out of molecules.
@yys61023 ай бұрын
A correct way of putting it will be "A motor made out of proteins"
@capricornuss3 ай бұрын
Metal isn't made out of molecules, it's made out of atoms stripped from their valence electrons and a shared cloud of electrons. So no molecules there.
@belg4mit3 ай бұрын
@@yys6102 molecular-scale motor
@itsJPhere3 ай бұрын
I would be more impressed if the bacteria didn't have any way of locomotion but it would still move around. You know, like by invisible magic, in a supernatural way. Now it's just same old physical thing like all other methods of locomotion and movement are too.
@NozomuYume3 ай бұрын
@@capricornuss True, but it would be hard to make a motor with no molecular content. Even discounting various parts and lubrication, the fuel is molecular. Even if you powered it with a non-molecular fuel, the oxidizer would be molecular O2. You'd have to find a complete fuel made entirely of somewhat-stable singlets.
@EstewCA2 ай бұрын
Congratulations on a marvellous 300th episode! Thanks for sharing.
@ivytarablair3 ай бұрын
The first time I saw the flagellar motor I was staggered - i have never forgotten it. Later I stumbled onto an animation of kinesin protein walking on a micro-tubule and was just as floored. The molecular machinery of life is mind blowing and I LOVE IT :D
@daveduncan27483 ай бұрын
Both are miraculous!
@kenfryer20903 ай бұрын
It's designed. There is no explanation that random mutations could have created it
@daveduncan27483 ай бұрын
@@kenfryer2090 Yep. A great example of irreducible complexity (Michael Behe). It has more than 30 necessary parts, and doesn't work at all without any one of them. The odds of that forming by random are so astronomical that finding one specific atom in the universe would look simple by comparison.
@Thezuule13 ай бұрын
@@kenfryer2090 this is fully explained without the use of magic. There are numerous papers detailing it including one Destin himself posted here.
@Thezuule13 ай бұрын
@@daveduncan2748 irreducible complexity has never been demonstrated and Behe is a conman. Evolution by natural selection is not random.
@1hbhDTL3 ай бұрын
Lovely to see Prash smile when Destin interrupts to ask a clarifying question and make engineering analogies.
@Bethany-fo6lt3 ай бұрын
Two boys at heart learning from each other. It's so fun.
@EoThorne3 ай бұрын
Texts video to buddy. Buddy: “Oh, Destin is into crochet. Good for him.”
@sophierobinson27383 ай бұрын
Crochet was the first thing that popped into my head!
@vincentgiovannini96113 ай бұрын
Thank you! Thank you for your time that you put into all of your videos!
@Nick-Lab3 ай бұрын
If you take a uni level intro to evolutionary bio, it opens your mind up to how all this could come to be naturally. Each piece in the motor could be used as a piece to a simpler biological machine. Millions of machines get made by each cell, some work as intended, some are misshapen, others are different in some way, and that is what selective pressures work on.
@y29k153 ай бұрын
Yeah, it sounded like he was trying to imply that God must have created it because it's too complicated to spawn on it's own :/ That's like a Sunday school level fallacy you don't normally encounter from science KZbinrs.
@anonymoususer35613 ай бұрын
@@y29k15 You can almost call the small chance of such things appearing "God"
@NothingXemnas3 ай бұрын
And that is in a single cell. 1% of our weight is non-human (bacteria, fungi...) and that 1% makes up MORE cells than human cells in a single person. In the planet, there are quadrillions of cells doing trial and error. Every. Second. For thousands x thousands x thousands of years. The scale is *unimaginable*. Perhaps that is another way to see in a spiritual/religious way. Afterall, data doesn't mean we can imagine, and lots of quantum mechanics are purely philosophical (its first proposal was Schrodinger's Cat), but don't misunderstand me, I am not saying this is a religious matter. Just saying that if you are to be inspired spiritually, then better be by an astronomical scale. Simply unimaginable. Like, broken, even.
@scottrussell10183 ай бұрын
Irreducible complexity
@WaterspoutsOfTheDeep3 ай бұрын
I would completely disagree. It gives ZERO explanation, far less a theoretical one. Evolution does not have foresight. There is no evolutionary pressure to create the parts to a cellular mechanism that doesn't exist yet. Evolution is and always has been pseudo science. The only real world examples of evolution are reductive evolution aka degradation of genetics giving a benefit like antibiotic resistant bacteria or the long term ecoli experiment.
@LtFoeHammer3 ай бұрын
"Oh yes, this is the best part!" Gotta love that kind of drive, to be excited about months of meticulous matching and analyzing because it means answers and discovery.
@itabiritomg3 ай бұрын
I'm an experienced engineer and I think I understand how things work more or less well, but since I started studying microbiology, my mind has exploded! A new world has opened up, a world of ultra-efficient, super miniaturized and extremely complex machines!
@Heracles_FE3 ай бұрын
But , it just happened by accident. 😂😂😂
@aniksamiurrahman63653 ай бұрын
@@Heracles_FE No. They happened by magic, r8?
@aniksamiurrahman63653 ай бұрын
@@itabiritomg Hi, biologist here. The machine analogy is used too much. Biological "machines" are thermodynamically driven. They aren't mechanical devices. That is - their movements are actually nothing but random thermal vibration of molecules, just biased in a specific way to make a consistent movement. For example - the gear protein that makes the flagellar motor move, doesn't do any gearing at all. It just supplies hydrogen ions to it in a specific direction. Secondly, I want to emphasize that these 'mchines' aren't that efficient either. For example - flagellar motion works with
@Heracles_FE3 ай бұрын
@@aniksamiurrahman6365 OK buddy , we couldn't build one that spins that fast smaller than a refrigerator, but you know , time and chance and all ... 🤡
@GoofyAhOklahoma3 ай бұрын
@@aniksamiurrahman6365 When we say machine, we didn't strictly mean a rigid mechanism. A machine is just any device that can use energy to perform work in order to achieve a function. These flagellar motors certainly fit in that description and they are still extremely incredible and wonderful.
@PatrickDeAngelisTech16 күн бұрын
You man are by far the smartest youtuber around, no ignorance about admitted.
@sadpluslonely27753 ай бұрын
The bacteria knows where it is, because it knows where it isn't
@Clockworkbio3 ай бұрын
Underrated comment
@jakobc.25583 ай бұрын
It knows this because it knows where it isn't. By subtractinf where it is from where it isn't or where it isn't from where it is, whichever is greater, it obtains a "difference" or "deviation".
@orbatos3 ай бұрын
Except it doesn't "know" anything. There is simply a stimulus from a direction that triggers a cascade of reactions to move towards or away from that.
@emptyshirt3 ай бұрын
Dithering is actually a great analogy for evolution. When the bacteria doesn't need to move (evolve) it stays relatively still. When it does need to move it moves in random direction. It is improbable that it would go back to the start, but there is no "forward".
@yt_bharat3 ай бұрын
😅
@johngrider7373 ай бұрын
Very glad to see this video. The molecular machines inside our cells are absolutely mind-blowing.
@WaterspoutsOfTheDeep3 ай бұрын
Don't mention the word mind, the naturalists heads will explode lol.
@abel35572 ай бұрын
@@WaterspoutsOfTheDeepDon't mention the word head, creationists dont have one.
@WaterspoutsOfTheDeepАй бұрын
@@abel3557 My statement is based in reason and science unlike yours. Naturalism cannot account for a rational mind. In other words produce it since you need everything spoon fed to you. Reminder of your history, creationists specifically Christians gave you universities, scientific method, modern science, took mysticism out of science and much more.
@WaterspoutsOfTheDeepАй бұрын
@@abel3557 My statement is based in reason and science unlike yours. Naturalism cannot account for a rational mind hence my comment you couldn't grasp.
@abel3557Ай бұрын
@@WaterspoutsOfTheDeep Your statement is based on falsehood and willful ignorance. There is no other explanation that has evidence backing it that explains the complexity of life besides Evolutionary biology as well as the chemistry and physics involved. Smarter Every Day is just another puppet that tried to pry in creationist propaganda into his video, despite there being many scientific papers already explaining the questions he has. It is the true nature of a theist, a hot glued veil of blind faith. Dogma controls his life, just as it does to you.
@ZachDxn3 ай бұрын
Prashant Singh was really fun to listen to, cool guy! Also, you're awesome Destin, thank you!
@chamberpaint2 ай бұрын
I’m just a dame from no Discipine whatsoever, but am excited about wrapping my head around concepts of which I have no knowledge. This conversation was done so well I could understand the beauty of this design, and the very idea you’ve found a MOTOR at the cellular level in a BACTERIA. Tiny mind blown.
@philipershler4203 ай бұрын
I am a retired bio engineer. The lab that I worked in for over half of my 74 years studied the molecular structure of cardiac muscle cells. The contraction of these muscle cells is driven by gradients of several different ions, much like the flagellar motors. There are ion channels that open to allow ions to flow into the cell to cause contraction and then there are ion pumps that are used to re-establish the gradients to allow the cell to relax. So my question is this, if these molecular motors are driven by the gradient of hydrogen ions, have the ion pumps, that must exist, been studied that regulate the ionic gradient? Thanks for a wonderful discussion!
@skyppiland3 ай бұрын
Yes, the proton pump exist and involve in sooooo many cases like in your stomach to keep the pH at low level, and it has also been studied for decades 😉
@4798alexander47983 ай бұрын
@smartereveryday. There is another rotating mechanism in all our bodies (not bacteria) called "ATP-Synthetase". It uses a pH gradient in Mitochondria to produce ATP, which is then used in EVERY energetic process in the cell. Basically it is at the core of how we live. You can make a video about that please :)
@MarcoPrevedello923 ай бұрын
The number of biologists in the comment section is already considerable! But I have to say that as a microbiologist, I find Destin's excitement and surprise about the elegance of biological systems so heartwarming and satisfying!
@mikejettusa2 ай бұрын
Congratulations on 300. That's awesome. You are extremely entertaining and you make everything so easy to understand. You draw parallels to simple concepts and that really helps.❤
@Android4803 ай бұрын
The thing is, calling a biomechanical motor “complicated” is strange based on everything else we know about life. A brain is complicated. The immune system is complicsted. An entire organism working in unison is complicated. A little motor feels like the least wild thing about life. Put another way, inventing the steam engine is pretty cool, but humanity being able to globally communicate, innovate, and utilize that steam engine is even more crazy. The steam engine is simple in comparison.
@kungfreddie3 ай бұрын
Exactly.. everything that have evolved over a billion yr is "complex" .. but that's after a billion yr of evolution. It's like coming to a built house and being amazed that such a thing could just exist. We know the mechanisms of evolution.. it's not a mystery. This is litteraly the argument of religious zealots in 2007, they used the flagella and the eye as evidence for a creator. It was called intelligent design and was debated to death on yt in 2007-08 between atheists and religious ppl... ppl may remember thunderfoot and venomfangx.
@phasmata38133 ай бұрын
Agreed, but I suspect that Destin is a bit of a creationist/intelligent design believer, and they tend to have a certain way of perceiving things like this.
@ITSecurityFTW3 ай бұрын
I agree with you, but I also want to point out that the fact that a biomechanical motor is "simple" in terms of nature's complexity is extremely awesome and telling.
@derickd61503 ай бұрын
@@phasmata3813 It's true. It makes me a bit sad. Like complexity exists everywhere. It only seems special here because you didn't expect it here, and there it is. So now this is the proof that god exists? I am not so sure
@KingGurke983 ай бұрын
I think the interesting question is how you get there. There is a pretty obvious line from a single nerve connecting a sensor and a muscle over one more nerve next to it, to a whole bundle of nerves that make up a brain. To stick to your analogy: Figuring out how to talk to your neighbor, organising into a group, figuring out how to talk to other groups - that's a relatively straight forward process. But putting together all the principles needed to make a steam engine at once is a whole different beast.
@hikolanikola87753 ай бұрын
FINALY! someone reviewing this topic, last info i found about that was 10 years ago....
@raptorsean14643 ай бұрын
Yes, I agree.I want more of these type subject videos. I just recently watched something on a type of quantum consciousness (theory) on a specific lattice structure in cells. Which made complete sense to me because We can't understand how individual cells and bacteria can communicate with other parts of your body that they're not directly connected to. This stuff is SO fascinating.
@Neptoid3 ай бұрын
@@raptorsean1464 no, there is no unlocal causation on the level of cells. The body uses chemicals, hormones to signal parts of the body to repair, produce immune cells and the likes. They also use electric charge to communicate with their neighbors and that synchronizes their behavior. Just look up cell communication I guess
@rhoo36053 ай бұрын
The fact that I'm even here watching KZbin through a computer screen is mind-blowing.
@wakeupJacobs13 ай бұрын
Most underrated comment.
@Pottyde3 ай бұрын
It's amazing, no doubt. But biology is far, far more complex.
@hannahwells93973 ай бұрын
Computer science is my area of interest. I would be inclined to say that computer science is complex enough to compete with biology. We could just agree that computer science and Biology are both very complex and we don't need a winner.
@njones4203 ай бұрын
@@hannahwells9397 That's a hard no. I'm a medical-geneticist who fell into an IT/software career ... the two do not even compare.
@Pottyde3 ай бұрын
@@hannahwells9397 Imagination allows for much more than real life experience, but reality is real while fantasy and virtuality aren't. Even ignoring this disparity we're nowhere near to create a virtual organism that could compete in complexity with a single cell, let alone a whole animal. If you think I'm wrong, please give an example that I may not know of.
@xXkillahbudz2 ай бұрын
Amazing! Thank you for inquiring with these scientists and having the privilege to go there and show us what had been discussed! 👍🏽 Appreciate it. I need to watch your channel more often.