DNA vs RNA - Differences in Form and Function | Stated Clearly

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  • Опубліковано 23 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 109

  • @mrvlhs
    @mrvlhs Рік тому +90

    The name of this channel is no joke. Things are indeed started clearly. It's refreshing to find a source of information that is based in coherent explanations of form and function, cascading from first principles. Should be the norm but unfortunately it's not. Education is still based largely on memorization instead of understanding. Thank you for making such valuable content 👍

    • @tonyleukering8832
      @tonyleukering8832 Рік тому +3

      Indeed, we are not, in general, taught to think, only to remember.

    • @christianelder4983
      @christianelder4983 Рік тому

      @@tonyleukering8832 Yet not just memorization but often indoctrination. It's amazing how many are caught up in the evolution delusion. The narrator or developer of this animation is another one caught up in it. He's summarizes and compares the complexity of the inner workings of RNA and DNA, but then credits evolution with somehow figuring it out. Evolution figures out nothing. DNA the highly complex information system upon which all life is based did not come about by chance. That didn't happen. Random chaotic elemental interaction does not produce complex information. The information was created, it had (has) a designer. The bottom line of scientific inquiry should be who is that creator? Paul tells us in Colossians Jesus is our Creator. "Who is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of every creature: For by Him were all things created, that are in heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible, whether they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers: all things were created by Him, and for Him: And He is before all things, and by Him all things consist." Col. 1:15-17

  • @abbasfadhil1715
    @abbasfadhil1715 Рік тому +17

    I can't express my gratitude for how you really made me fall in love with biology (in particular, evolution and how different relations between species emerged).I live in Iraq, where evolution is taught in a conservative way but not entirely discarded. The more I know about the interactions and the stuff that's going on in your body to keep you alive, the more I love how outstanding our existence is. Unfortunately, I'd been taught that life came in the form that it does now. It literally put down my curiosity to know more about how these fascinating organisms came to be. Again, keep up your content so more people will probably share my experience (I almost forgot to say that I'm 15 and still in school, and I use much of your material to help me get through biology classes).😊🤩❤

  • @thelostone6981
    @thelostone6981 Рік тому +25

    Maybe I’m odd, but it is a numinous feeling to be living in a time when we have the scientific method to help better understand our universe and those of us living in it. To think that for billions of years, simple life flourished and then began to diversify to the point that there is us, canines, jellyfish and orchids!! It blows my mind and I love it! Thanks Stated Clearly for the thoughtful and precise explanations of the sciences. I never studied any of this in college (finance graduate), but I do love learning these things!
    Cheers

    • @DeconvertedMan
      @DeconvertedMan Рік тому +1

      You might be odd, but I think that scinece lets us see the real world, and its pretty amazing, and scary, and wonderous and all the things because its really real, and we can know that for sure! That is amazing!

    • @logic8673
      @logic8673 Рік тому

      We have the intution of what has design. Also a sense of improbability and probability. If DNA has 6 billion letters. The 3 Letters form individual code. Sequences are instructions. Pulling random letters out of a box to form a word is not the magic, the magic is the mind who perceive it as a word. Similarly Gene from DNA means nothing unless it means something to something else. In this case nanomachines. Blow your mind is your intuition ....what do you think? what do you think it tells you? Especially if you have some idea of probability.

    • @MikkoRantalainen
      @MikkoRantalainen Рік тому

      However, the *scientific method* is still so poorly teached in elementary schools that many people with religious background fail to understand it properly even after fully completing the elementary school.
      I think this is the single biggest failure of modern education system.

    • @larsnystrom6698
      @larsnystrom6698 Рік тому +1

      @thelostone6981
      You aren't odd!
      Some people thought so in the 1600s.
      We know more now. But 400 more years won't hurt. Someone the will think this thought then too!

    • @iSketchyHub
      @iSketchyHub 4 місяці тому

      Perhaps this video can help us ask important questions like; if the DNA is stable, guarded and repaired with the amount of data available in even a pin head of it, was it designed or just happened by accident?

  • @marc-ericleblanc-seguin4514
    @marc-ericleblanc-seguin4514 Рік тому +6

    New Stated Clearly videos always make me happy

  • @maracachucho8701
    @maracachucho8701 Рік тому +23

    I would have loved it if this video existed back when I was in school, but I'm still grateful for it even now that I'm working on my thesis!

  • @miginstol
    @miginstol Рік тому +22

    Thank you for always clearing my concepts it's really helpful for my upcoming exam

  • @BEV_shorts
    @BEV_shorts Місяць тому

    I live in Auckland and I APPRECIATE UOA sponsoring this great and simply explained video

  • @Ningen250
    @Ningen250 Рік тому +2

    This is one of the best channels or sources of informations ever, and what amazes me is the Precision and quality of the informations it just incredible, I want to you to talk about the chemical structure of any organism.

  • @sciencenerd7639
    @sciencenerd7639 Рік тому +6

    Your explanations and animations are amazing. Thanks so much for all that you do.

  • @albertvejil5976
    @albertvejil5976 Рік тому +1

    The best I have seen today on explaining the difference between DNA and RNA. Thank you so much!

  • @AKSB2790
    @AKSB2790 Рік тому +3

    Love this channel, i will use this in future to explain these concepts to my son

  • @tranquilious
    @tranquilious Рік тому

    So far the best video on DNA and RNA on the internet! Thank u so much

  • @Mark-Wilson
    @Mark-Wilson Рік тому +7

    I enjoy videos like these. Keep making them!

  • @Artful-Adventure
    @Artful-Adventure Рік тому

    The best video for knowing the different between RNA and DNA. Thank you so much for making these kind of valuable informative videos.

  • @elly1976
    @elly1976 Місяць тому

    Thank you. I got a clear idea while studying for my Biology 10. Thank you again!

  • @Tehreem_Irfan
    @Tehreem_Irfan Рік тому +1

    no doubt you stated clearly all the concepts about dna your teaching way and animation is amazing

  • @DarrenGedye
    @DarrenGedye Рік тому +1

    Superb work as usual! I did a double take when I saw some te reo Māori in your opening title. Te Ao Mārama "the world of light" traditionally refers to when Tāne (god of forests and birds) separated his parents Ranginui (the sky father) and Papatūānuku (the earth mother). This let the sun shine in between his parents and created our world, the world of light.

  • @Truth-fully.
    @Truth-fully. 4 дні тому

    Thank you guys so much, this is really understandable and well stated clearly, May God bless the team as you guys help us to understand the wonders of His creation wich so wonderfully and amazingly testifies of Him.

  • @LeftSoulz
    @LeftSoulz Рік тому +1

    I've aways thought about why we have this difference in the nucleotide T in DNA and U in RNA, its pretty interesting to see that its the same reason we have the difference between the RNA and DNA structure itself. brilliant!

  • @ShakaKG
    @ShakaKG Рік тому

    I like how upgraded are your animations are now.
    The sounds and detailed information that intersect with previous videos.
    Thank you

  • @Phyjix
    @Phyjix Рік тому +1

    Clear - Simple - Great

  • @franktappen
    @franktappen 2 місяці тому

    Great video. Simplified and spot on.

  • @extraterrestrial7424
    @extraterrestrial7424 Рік тому

    Very well done. You even don't forget to name all the exceptions to the general rule several times.

  • @kensaville513
    @kensaville513 8 місяців тому

    Thanks - definitely stated clearly. I would like to have also seen more emphasis on how RNA folds up to form complex 2D and 3D structures allowing it to function as ribozymes.

  • @kristinejoypequena8478
    @kristinejoypequena8478 9 місяців тому

    Wow I love this channel, everything is stated clearly!

  • @haroldwood1394
    @haroldwood1394 Рік тому

    What an excellent discussion! Thank you.

  • @Pingwn
    @Pingwn Рік тому +5

    I am glad to see another science video from you!
    Do you know rather or not there is an example of an RNA virus switching to use DNA?

    • @StatedClearly
      @StatedClearly  Рік тому +11

      Retroviruses (like HIV) do this. They have an RNA genome, they convert it to DNA once inside the cell, then they insert that DNA into the host's DNA.
      If you can imagine a thing, there's a virus out there somewhere doing it!

  • @IsilTasdemir
    @IsilTasdemir Місяць тому

    You sound very sick please take a break I love yout videos they are so easy to follow your health matters

  • @ordinarryalien
    @ordinarryalien Рік тому +5

    It's been a long time, welcome back. :)

  • @mayurchaudhari850
    @mayurchaudhari850 Рік тому +3

    The difference between thymine and uracil is a methyl group

  • @5driedgrams
    @5driedgrams 3 місяці тому

    Thank you, that was very helpful.

  • @kengoold7157
    @kengoold7157 Рік тому

    that's a great presentation mate. very clear. just subscribed, looking forward to more.

  • @rursus8354
    @rursus8354 Рік тому +1

    Uracil instead of Thymine as well as Ribose instead of Deoxiribose. Because of the later RNA is much less stable than DNA - so DNA is the better storage medium.

  • @thermophysix
    @thermophysix 6 місяців тому

    Great video, thank you so much!

  • @sevimocak477
    @sevimocak477 Рік тому

    Its awesome one of your videos. Thanks for your good work.

  • @Abigail_Hertsberg
    @Abigail_Hertsberg 11 місяців тому

    It helped me a lot! Awesome channel❤

  • @Frostyflytrap
    @Frostyflytrap Рік тому +1

    My understanding of this is very surface level but I'm curious about something. When RNA copies are made from a double strand DNA, how does the cell know which "side" of the chain to copy from? For example, in the diagram on 1:53 the left side has a sequence of ATGCTA while the right side is coded with the "negative mold" of TACGAT. I expect that these two sequences would do very different things when being read by a protein so I'm curious to know the mechanism that makes sure the right side is coped. Also, I remember you mentioned in another video or on your second channel about how entire genes are re-inserted into the DNA chain by accident which leads to unintended side effects.
    If my understanding is accurate and there is such a case of "the wrong side of DNA" being copied, could that be a source of mutation?

    • @StatedClearly
      @StatedClearly  Рік тому +1

      Eventually I'll do a video on Transcription (the process you're asking about). In short, transcription factors (proteins, many of which can latch onto specific sequences of DNA) get the process started. Their sequence specificity allows them to select the correct strand and the correct spot on that strand.

  • @ImAMassiveBender
    @ImAMassiveBender Рік тому +2

    I love the way at the end you had some questions and said "These are mysteries that you, dear viewer, might solve." Rather than "these are mysteries that you can solve by subscribing to Brilliant" or "Curiosity Stream"

    • @4124V4TA-SNPCA-x
      @4124V4TA-SNPCA-x 5 місяців тому

      ... aaaand you have ruined it with your advertisement of those ...

  • @adamkelley4746
    @adamkelley4746 5 місяців тому

    Not enough credit is given to videos like this!

  • @karimguerahli3837
    @karimguerahli3837 Рік тому

    Finally. A new video

  • @FutureAIDev2015
    @FutureAIDev2015 Рік тому

    So if DNA is long term storage and RNA is the copied instructions then DNA is like the hard drive and RNA is like the RAM

  • @ryanpiotr1929
    @ryanpiotr1929 4 місяці тому +1

    This video made me realize that ribosomes are named after ribonucleic acid.

  • @wcdeich4
    @wcdeich4 Рік тому

    Isn't there a rare 5th RNA base? I heard something about it in highschool biology, but can't remember it's name. I think it started with "i".

  • @SKAKIEVISSER
    @SKAKIEVISSER Рік тому

    Hi! This is an excellent, well- informing video, which I thank you so much for! I am a first-year student (education- Biology) and now need to make animated videos myself. I've worked with easier videos that is basically picture slideshows with sound. Still wondering how to make things move like in this video though... May I please have the honour of getting some of your expert tips? :)

  • @Lavindil23
    @Lavindil23 Рік тому

    Thank you for the video.

  • @mikebellamy
    @mikebellamy Рік тому

    _"RNA is fragile, reactive and easily falls apart"_ something overlooked in the RNA world hypothesis!

  • @SiddharthParlikad
    @SiddharthParlikad 4 місяці тому

    Can you make a video that explains how rna became dna a long time ago? thanks

    • @spatrk6634
      @spatrk6634 2 місяці тому

      One hypothesis for the transition from RNA to DNA involves the enzyme reverse transcriptase, which can copy RNA sequences into DNA. This enzyme is still found in retroviruses, which use RNA as their genetic material and convert it into DNA to integrate into host genomes. Early life forms might have developed similar enzymes, enabling the conversion of RNA genomes into DNA.

  • @firasnizam
    @firasnizam Рік тому +1

    Thanks!

  • @SAGA-sz9ed
    @SAGA-sz9ed Місяць тому

    Love you voice!

  • @Jayceearegee
    @Jayceearegee Рік тому

    Excellent content, wish the algo would push this content instead of the typical anencephalic nonsense

  • @akashverma5756
    @akashverma5756 7 місяців тому

    Simply Explained :- DNA is hard drive, RNA are RAM and Ribosome is printer.

  • @jim409
    @jim409 Рік тому

    Superb video. ❤

  • @tabaxsum
    @tabaxsum Рік тому +1

    can anyone tell me what is happening in the animation at 9:33

    • @Ningen250
      @Ningen250 Рік тому +1

      Look here 1:35 ... a functional chain of RNA (Ribozyme) so "I guess that means it make protein by combining different parts" because that's what RNA is for right?

    • @StatedClearly
      @StatedClearly  Рік тому +1

      You can learn about that specific ribozyme in our animation "What is the RNA world hypothesis?". www.statedclearly.com/videos/rna-world/
      It's one that make nucleotides. Here's a paper about it: www.sfu.ca/~punrau/pdfs/Lau_JACS_2004.pdf

  • @Zift_Ylrhavic_Resfear
    @Zift_Ylrhavic_Resfear Рік тому

    Thanks for the video :)

  • @Neo0311
    @Neo0311 Рік тому

    It's like a permanent memory vs ram. You copy the data off the memory and manipulate it in the ram.

  • @ScienceDave1265
    @ScienceDave1265 Рік тому

    I think it's about time I actually subscribed, don'tcha think? 😁

  • @SamukaPradhan-gw6il
    @SamukaPradhan-gw6il 2 місяці тому

    Nice video 👍👍👍👍

  • @larsnystrom6698
    @larsnystrom6698 Рік тому

    This is good!

  • @samshambles391
    @samshambles391 Рік тому

    Brilliant!

  • @eightifyapp
    @eightifyapp Рік тому

    TLDR: DNA and RNA have distinct structures and roles, with DNA providing stability for storage and RNA providing activity for protein production.

  • @tombouie
    @tombouie Рік тому

    Enlightening

  • @Hansulf
    @Hansulf Рік тому

    Funny I always use the same library analogy to explain DNA and RNA

  • @shriramoka
    @shriramoka Рік тому

    Class 🌟

  • @trollquantum
    @trollquantum Рік тому +2

    It was tasty content indeed

  • @knowledgeispower2155
    @knowledgeispower2155 Рік тому

    Huge Gap between Videos..... why ?

  • @SCB-dd4io
    @SCB-dd4io Рік тому

    Nice!

  • @sonofode902
    @sonofode902 Місяць тому

    who said it first form equal function?

    • @sonofode902
      @sonofode902 Місяць тому

      Form follows function-that has been misunderstood. Form and function should be one, joined in a spiritual union.
      -Frank Lloyd Wright

    • @sonofode902
      @sonofode902 Місяць тому

      the video twist it. Function comes before form, not the orher way around.

  • @mycount64
    @mycount64 Рік тому

    Form follows function. The brain?

  • @DeconvertedMan
    @DeconvertedMan Рік тому

    How RNA got started is still a mystery?

    • @StatedClearly
      @StatedClearly  Рік тому

      Yes, current models are incomplete. For details, see my video "What is the RNA world hypothesis?"

  • @Somasekhar-hj2li
    @Somasekhar-hj2li Рік тому

    👏👏👏

  • @joshuacovington5947
    @joshuacovington5947 Рік тому

    Rna is like a clone of your true self.

  • @milevaeinstein2199
    @milevaeinstein2199 Рік тому

    💞

  • @gregoryt8792
    @gregoryt8792 5 місяців тому +2

    All glory goes to God.

    • @gregoryt8792
      @gregoryt8792 5 місяців тому

      No way this “evolved” from non living things. And how do you explain topoisomerase, a molecular machine, which untangles DNA? Which came first? DNA is not long, it is a SIX FOOT long molecule that fits inside a microscopic cell.

  • @grindelston5968
    @grindelston5968 Рік тому

    It's not a spiral it's a helix
    Spirals are 2 dimensional

    • @DarrenGedye
      @DarrenGedye Рік тому

      @@grindelston5968 Have you ever been on a spiral staircase?

  • @nsTurkish
    @nsTurkish Рік тому

    Turkish subtitles please

  • @aminkhandrishak6045
    @aminkhandrishak6045 4 місяці тому

    🌿❤🌺❤🌿

  • @mikebellamy
    @mikebellamy Рік тому +1

    You missed an important detail *chiralty* the fact that DNA and RNA bases are exclusively *right handed* while the amino acids they code for are exclusively *left handed* means the difficulty of prebiotic chemistry building a living cell with all the basic functional machinery required of life by random processes is beyond the capacity of this universe!
    The first reason being the total number of microstates in the system of all the RNA molecules required to build even one of the molecular machines required makes the haystack too big and needle vanishingly small.
    The second reason is only a mind can give *meaning* to information it is not possible from random chemistry and since DNA is exactly analogous to a library of books containing vital information with meaning we know only a mind is capable of producing it.
    The third reason is cell machinery is machinery in an engineering sense being an assembly of matter designed to convert a specific input into a desired output thus implying agency or conscious intent. Plus all the parts must be made and assembled at the same time and in the same place according to a strict plan! An impossible hurdle for natural selection of minor random changes.

    • @ywoisug8845
      @ywoisug8845 Рік тому

      Everything is possible, life might as well be soooo rare that it only happened once in the whole endless universe, and we would have no way of knowing. No matter how impossible something seems, it's still possinle enough to happen. I can give you a 1 in a 10000000000000000000000 number, the same applies here

  • @MelekBabi-du6fm
    @MelekBabi-du6fm Рік тому

    😢😂 the way y😢 make 😂

  • @Meta369
    @Meta369 Рік тому

    Who will do graphics for me, to show the world how the actual world works, and it's not a spinning ball

    • @case_sensitive
      @case_sensitive Рік тому

      A flat earther? I really hoped you guys were all gone since 2018

  • @Meta369
    @Meta369 Рік тому +2

    Who writes all the comments for you and all the other BS science sites? Is this what AI was initially designed for?

  • @swanginichandravanshi4476
    @swanginichandravanshi4476 Рік тому

    Please explain in Hindi

  • @roy1257
    @roy1257 Рік тому +1

    Thanks!

  • @mdesm2005
    @mdesm2005 Рік тому +1

    Thanks!