How Viruses Evolved

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  • Опубліковано 16 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 441

  • @Emelefpi
    @Emelefpi 4 роки тому +183

    I'd really love to see a video on extinct mammalian groups such as the multituberculates, (or any other extinct mammals which can't be categorized as placentals, marsupials or monotremes)

    • @mothlightmedia1936
      @mothlightmedia1936  4 роки тому +86

      Yeah I think that would make a good video, I've been meaning to make a video on the evolution of live birth in mammals for ages as well.

    • @Emelefpi
      @Emelefpi 4 роки тому +28

      @@mothlightmedia1936 that would be fantastic but honestly every video you make is absolute gold...I just found your channel this month and it is already my favorite evolutionary history channel on UA-cam

    • @mothlightmedia1936
      @mothlightmedia1936  4 роки тому +29

      Thank you man I appreciate it

    • @LDrosophila
      @LDrosophila 3 роки тому +6

      I'm here for the evolution of the placenta!

    • @carloshenriquez125
      @carloshenriquez125 3 роки тому +2

      @@LDrosophila Yes that would be neat!

  • @nesslig2025
    @nesslig2025 4 роки тому +400

    Every evolutionary biology youtuber now be like
    *"mmmh...perhaps I should be talking about viruses in my next video"*

  • @tobiasboh3370
    @tobiasboh3370 3 роки тому +282

    Viruses be like "I'm going to seize these means of reproduction"

    • @rabbit9905
      @rabbit9905 3 роки тому +9

      He tried to avoid it too lol 😂 "seize the means..... to reproduce...."

    • @daywalker3735
      @daywalker3735 3 роки тому +2

      Damn socialists!

    • @ok1025
      @ok1025 2 роки тому +2

      Viruses are commies now.

    • @hectorzero8545
      @hectorzero8545 2 роки тому +4

      @@ok1025 i mean they act the same lol

    • @duggerson8982
      @duggerson8982 2 роки тому +1

      @@hectorzero8545 Based

  • @GreysToons
    @GreysToons 4 роки тому +180

    Fascinating stuff! I’m glad I found this channel, I’ve been binging on your work all morning haha

  • @Joakim1400
    @Joakim1400 4 роки тому +439

    It's insane how something so small and simple can have such a big impact on the world

    • @33BottlesOnMyDesk
      @33BottlesOnMyDesk 4 роки тому +13

      I just learned about viroids and I found that far more fascinating than viruses

    • @Larotian
      @Larotian 4 роки тому +16

      The planndemic!

    • @xhawkenx633
      @xhawkenx633 4 роки тому +37

      It isn't insane, it is the basic principle of how this universe works. Smallest and simplest Atom in the universe? Hydrogen, literally the energy source for everything... it goes on and on.
      The reason that seem insane to you is because you were told by society for so long, that the small individual can't achive anything meaningfull.

    • @ciricognjen
      @ciricognjen 4 роки тому +5

      @@xhawkenx633 exactly !!

    • @Rossscow
      @Rossscow 4 роки тому +1

      Numbers win. Same goes for bacteria.

  • @aetherslugstar1889
    @aetherslugstar1889 4 роки тому +213

    There are even some viruses that infect other viruses. That's a fact that's true nightmare fuel.

    • @jonstfrancis
      @jonstfrancis 4 роки тому +42

      Which would lend to the theory that viruses are older than cellular life!

    • @simpleinverso8628
      @simpleinverso8628 3 роки тому +38

      @@jonstfrancis the fact that viruses could be older than life it's... Poetic!
      Although unpleasant, and often times dangerous, viruses make me realize how impressive it is the fact that a chemical reaction can replicate itself...
      And I'm made of it...
      Man, I love how life works, and I am very thankful to be part of it!

    • @dibershai6009
      @dibershai6009 3 роки тому +9

      How do viruses infect each other? I have heard about viruses infecting jerms but not other viruses!

    • @jacobialbert6683
      @jacobialbert6683 3 роки тому +1

      Virus got to jonsfrancis before he could divulge its secrets...

    • @Goldfish1060
      @Goldfish1060 3 роки тому +47

      @@dibershai6009 they are called virophages and they are parasites of those large mamoviruses that were mentioned in the video. They don’t infect them in the typical way, as the host being a virus lacks the self replication factories inside. Rather they wait for the large virus to infect a cell, and the hijack the process for themselves. This causes the host cell to make copies of the virophage rather than the Mamovirus.

  • @awilliams4018
    @awilliams4018 4 роки тому +28

    @10:18 wow, Ken Ham is a Patron... I know it's not AIG Ken Ham, but it'd be funny if it was 😅

  • @scotland369
    @scotland369 4 роки тому +175

    Don't forget prions which are smaller than viruses and can replicate without genetic material.

    • @LimeyLassen
      @LimeyLassen 4 роки тому +53

      Prions are the weirdest shit in the world.

    • @trezapoioiuy
      @trezapoioiuy 4 роки тому +49

      Prions are what makes me propend for the second theory, as they show that something created by a cell can accidentally become a pathogen agent, in the right (wrong?) conditions.

    • @shawnwales696
      @shawnwales696 3 роки тому +5

      @@adambartlett114 Maybe because they have to be the right environment to replicate, usually inside an animal. Since neurological prions tend to eventually make the host non viable, could be the reason why prions (and prions disease) are not more prevalent. Now there is a good reason to go vegan or at least culture animal protein rather than eat meat that used to be a live animal.

    • @creme1858
      @creme1858 2 роки тому +13

      @@LimeyLassen literally just misfolded protein lol

    • @libraryofpangea7018
      @libraryofpangea7018 2 роки тому +12

      @@creme1858
      Prions aren't *just* misfolded protiens, they're rogue protiens that also replicate that misfold upon other protiens which enables their virulence.
      Not all misfolded protiens become prions, it's the additional capacity for pathogenicity that makes a misfolded protien a prion.
      You can have proteopathy, or misfolds, without that misfold becoming a virulent pathogen & is the cause of several neural degenerative diseases & genetic disorders.

  • @BalloonDraw
    @BalloonDraw 4 роки тому +23

    Feel like you should've mentioned that arguably the main reason viruses aren't considered living is because they lack homeostasis. You brought up the blurred line of living vs chemical and even attributed it to them not self-replicating but didn't mention homeostasis

  • @stephenspackman5573
    @stephenspackman5573 2 роки тому +7

    I favour the theory that they are (relics of) an ancient horizontal gene transfer mechanism, not predating the cell, but predating what we would now call a “species”.

  • @NORTH02
    @NORTH02 4 роки тому +13

    I’ve been thinking about making a video like this, good stuff!

  • @The_SOB_II
    @The_SOB_II 4 роки тому +15

    I can't believe I've been watching SciShow and Eons for years and YT never showed me this channel until recently

  • @rodrigorosatoalves
    @rodrigorosatoalves 4 роки тому +13

    Great video! And thank you for the size comparison. It really helps to put things in context! I guess it wouldn’t hurt to be a bit more specific about the examples. Like... a coronavirus, a red blood cell, an E. coli and so on. Things commonly known by the average Joe and Jane lol

  • @nickpater
    @nickpater 4 роки тому +16

    Early life and evolution in general is such an interesting topic! I was thinking of finding some nonfiction books to read on this. Anyone here have good reads about this kind of stuff?

    • @FrozenWillow1980
      @FrozenWillow1980 4 роки тому +1

      The Aquatic Ape Hypothesis - Elaine Morgan. So it's not factual, but it is a working theory. It's not too deep that you think, how did I get here.

    • @b.a.erlebacher1139
      @b.a.erlebacher1139 2 роки тому +1

      Life on a Young Planet: the First 3 Billion Years by Andrew H. Knoll. Really excellent book, fascinating reading, by an actual scientist in this field.

  • @Pahjx
    @Pahjx 3 роки тому +11

    I didn't know viroids were a thing, it really does blur the lines between life and chemical reactions.

  • @I_leave_mean_comments
    @I_leave_mean_comments 4 роки тому +66

    I've been a fan since this channel started. You've really improved dramatically. It's cool to see the little changes from video to video. You're doing everything right. I hope it pays off for you.

    • @mothlightmedia1936
      @mothlightmedia1936  4 роки тому +28

      Thank you and thank you for the advice in the past, your name doesn't proceed you.

  • @digitalchameleon1884
    @digitalchameleon1884 2 роки тому +1

    These videos are excellent sir. You have a great narration voice and deliver the info in a superb fluid way, being a Zoologist with a penchant for Reptiles and Amphibians I find myself over the years concentrating on these areas too much. These videos have taught me so much about many other lifeforms and processes for which I am extremely grateful. I am currently reading books by Carl Zimmer on Viruses. Please keep this up thankyou. I subscribed to you today :)

  • @mgevirtz
    @mgevirtz Рік тому +1

    Hey man, I love your videos. You have taught me a lot.

  • @BenjaminISmith
    @BenjaminISmith 4 роки тому +44

    There is no line between life and chemistry. It's just more useful to say that animals, plants, and things like that are different than rocks, air and water

    • @Spootiful
      @Spootiful 4 місяці тому +3

      Couldn't you just say that life is just self-replicating chemistry?

    • @TheExtremeCube
      @TheExtremeCube 3 місяці тому +1

      Life involves consciousness which is not a chemical reaction.

    • @Twiska
      @Twiska 18 днів тому

      ​@@TheExtremeCubeThen are mites alive? They don't have consciousness. OP is talking about how some people refuse to call viruses alive despite saying bacteria is alive. To OP it's all just chemicals causing reactions and when the reactions and interactions get complex enough, we call it life.

    • @TheExtremeCube
      @TheExtremeCube 18 днів тому +1

      @@Twiska What makes you think Mites are not conscious? I have no reason to believe they aren't, given that they have a nervous system, senses and actively move. It's organisms like plants and bacteria that it is harder to make a case for that they have consciousness, but you could do it since consciousness is not a property of neuronal computation (evidence is that you have highly complex areas of your brain with no consciousness like the cerebellum).

  • @RecklawTheAmazing
    @RecklawTheAmazing 4 роки тому +8

    What video editing software do you use? Your production quality is amazing

    • @mothlightmedia1936
      @mothlightmedia1936  4 роки тому +13

      I use gimp to edit images and hit film pro to put everything together

  • @wowisntitanamazinglyamazin9550
    @wowisntitanamazinglyamazin9550 4 роки тому +11

    So could that wasp virus possibly be adapted to help organs from being rejected during organ transplants?

    • @bodeeangus9957
      @bodeeangus9957 Рік тому +1

      Doubtful, the human immune system is very different from an insect’s.

    • @blackswan5034
      @blackswan5034 9 місяців тому

      ​@@bodeeangus9957really depends on global agendas , if they use crisper to edit the genes and make it compatible , but this would take billions of dollars and many decades of clinical trials but with science anything is possible given if it is within the realm and parameters that your working with and you fully understand the limitations of the law of physics

  • @tonyballerxxxx
    @tonyballerxxxx 4 роки тому +12

    This reinforced my theory that wasps are pure evil little creatures.

    • @just_a_guy9688
      @just_a_guy9688 4 роки тому

      Well, it's their instinct, they don't know any better.

    • @t6amygdala
      @t6amygdala 3 роки тому

      @@just_a_guy9688 I don’t support their instinct. They should just get a new one or sum idk

  • @CalSprigley
    @CalSprigley 4 роки тому +1

    This channel is criminally underrated

  • @shaynemaskall6984
    @shaynemaskall6984 4 роки тому +2

    I like this. Please do a part 2 on viruses!

  • @sheikowi
    @sheikowi 4 роки тому +25

    I'm amazed that during the current plague, millions have not viewed this video. I wonder how many of the covid spokesmen & hawkers have even the basic info contained herein. Keep up the superb superb work!

    • @zakr1187
      @zakr1187 3 роки тому +1

      This is not even gcse level biology that 15/16 year olds study

    • @t6amygdala
      @t6amygdala 3 роки тому

      @@zakr1187 then how haven’t I learned this at 14?

    • @KutWrite
      @KutWrite 2 роки тому +3

      One year later: What plague?

  • @ottovonnichtort7605
    @ottovonnichtort7605 4 роки тому +1

    this is a very fascinating subject! thank you!!

  • @JoeJoeTheCapybara
    @JoeJoeTheCapybara 4 роки тому +1

    Awesome video! Anyway we can a history of alligator, crocodile and caiman evolutions

    • @mothlightmedia1936
      @mothlightmedia1936  4 роки тому

      Well coincidently my next video is on crocodiles, although not that exact topic.

  • @eurybaric
    @eurybaric 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you for these videos! :)

  • @Pyro-Moloch
    @Pyro-Moloch 4 роки тому +3

    viruses look so mechanical. They're like robot spiders.

    • @Pyro-Moloch
      @Pyro-Moloch 4 роки тому

      @rent a shill well, thanks, that's cool to know

  • @spencermalone597
    @spencermalone597 2 роки тому +1

    I'm already pretty good about the info but hearing you explain it was very nice.

  • @PJ3721
    @PJ3721 3 роки тому +1

    Viruses can be used to genetically engineer specific cell types within an organism as well. As Crispr proteins and the associated genetic material could be added to a virus with the a base plate that would infect said cell type. Such a mechanism should theoretically make it possible to wipe out retroviruses from people and do all sorts of work as well.

  • @olanmills64
    @olanmills64 4 роки тому +5

    What about the possibility that multiple different types of viruses developed via different methods at different times and/or places?

  • @gc9133
    @gc9133 4 роки тому +5

    If you can find parts of the ancient virus's DNA in modern animals, does that mean you could technically remove them and piece it back together? Would be pretty cool if you could.

    • @tana9044
      @tana9044 11 місяців тому

      It will be cool, but disastrous. We barely survived ( though not entirely, because the virus is evolving ) Covid-19 , let’s not bring back ancient viruses to f**k us up.

  • @tardarsauce3355
    @tardarsauce3355 4 роки тому +7

    You channel is amazing, though I will say that DNA viruses also exist. They mutate much slower than RNA viruses

  • @annaarkless5822
    @annaarkless5822 2 роки тому +2

    i was thinking about how yawning must've evolved while at work today. from what i know, most vertabrates yawn so it must either be a very ancient trait or convergent evolution right? but since we dont really even know the function of yawning for sure, i imagine that probably complicates things a bit.

  • @scotland369
    @scotland369 4 роки тому +4

    @mothlightmedia can you do a video of the evolution of duck billed platypus?

    • @mothlightmedia1936
      @mothlightmedia1936  4 роки тому +6

      Yes I would like to, the problem is that the fossil record for the platypus is very bad but I'll see what I can do.

  • @bernard4459
    @bernard4459 3 роки тому +2

    In hindsight, moth light was low-key pushing the bat soup theory 🦇

  • @jamesraymond1158
    @jamesraymond1158 Рік тому

    Excellent, especially the origin theories.

  • @KikkerFish
    @KikkerFish 11 днів тому

    Great video! ❤

  • @marzipanmango
    @marzipanmango 3 роки тому +2

    Viruses are actually pretty important to life on earth as we know it. For example, there are plenty of viruses that kill bacteria, and without them, bacteria would overrun the oceans.

  • @ariesostia126
    @ariesostia126 Рік тому

    It took me a couple times watching this video over time to truly understand that beginning; viruses are so many times smaller than single cell organisms it's crazy.

  • @mikel6668
    @mikel6668 4 роки тому +3

    great video

  • @footthunder485
    @footthunder485 4 роки тому +1

    Great channel name btw

  • @micahj894
    @micahj894 3 роки тому +1

    "...blur the lines between life and chemical reactions..."
    This is so interesting to me.
    On one level of analysis, all of life, and all of reality for that matter, can be seen as chemical reactions.

  • @eane1275
    @eane1275 3 роки тому

    I was eating a chipotle burrito when you brought the whole embedding eggs in living insects...thanks....

  • @Lee90000
    @Lee90000 Рік тому

    Can't stop scratching watching this.

  • @stupidmangoz
    @stupidmangoz Рік тому

    I love how he almost sounds like he's purely speaking as a very interesting and fun book to read, with enthusiasm. Then he mentions "nightmare inducing" when talking about wasps and Idk if that was character breaking but it was hilarious

  • @Eye_Exist
    @Eye_Exist 2 роки тому

    I think the best explanation on virus evolution is that they evolved from bacteria/single celled organisms. bacteria, lets say, evolves in a symbiotic relationship between another organism, and this relationship becomes so strong and comprehensive (it lives its whole life cycle in the relationship) and never depends on anything but the host organism, leading eventually it to lose the reproduction capability on its own, as if its not needed, having it just takes extra energy without giving anything back. evolving into a virus would be especially beneficial in a poor-energy environment, where the host can just about sustain itself, but there is no surplus of energy to waste.
    very simple principle of whatever is beneficial, survives. evolution doesn't attempt to create more complex or life-like organisms. if its more beneficial just to be able to sustain oneself until it finds a host, then that will survive over those who waste their energy on something else as well.

  • @etinarcadiaego7424
    @etinarcadiaego7424 3 роки тому +6

    A virus is like a lifeform Junji Ito would design if he were god.

    • @zephyr-mq3cv
      @zephyr-mq3cv 3 роки тому

      Why does this make sense? 😂

  • @ARCtheCartoonMaster
    @ARCtheCartoonMaster 2 роки тому

    1:32 And sadly, not in a fun candy shell either. :(
    Though, in a sense, you *could* say it's a "f***ing shell", as many have misheard it.

  • @nopeno9130
    @nopeno9130 3 роки тому

    Surprised you went through this without mentioning plasmids despite mentioning the bit around 7:50, which seems far weaker. Simplified, they're a bacterial mechanism of encapsulating and communicating genetic information with one another, which can involve sending genetic information outside of the cell with an envelope, and(at least when I was in college) it was thought that this was a likely origin of viruses(if not THE likely origin). Not sure if any new knowledge has come about that makes this especially unlikely.
    It's very easy to imagine a plasmid that evolved to encourage production of itself and was likely even beneficial, but eventually came to be so strong as to completely hijack the machinery of any cell that received it, or simply lost its ability to be ejected(but not inject) and would accumulate until host cell death as a result.
    Sorry if any details are mistaken, it's been a long time since college.
    I personally also think that the existence of at least four different kinds of self-replicating(directly or indirectly) schema(cellular life, viroids, viruses and prions) is ample evidence to believe that different viruses may have originated independently in any number of ways. Some larger viruses having "degenerated" from cellular life doesn't seem too improbable either, for example.

  • @juanleuschner7457
    @juanleuschner7457 4 роки тому +3

    Can you please explain in a video why elephants, rhinos, large felynes and other large animals have went extinct everywhere else, but still survive in africa? Like the American lion or the woolly rhino.

    • @mothlightmedia1936
      @mothlightmedia1936  4 роки тому +4

      Yeah that actually sounds like a really good idea for a video

    • @juanleuschner7457
      @juanleuschner7457 4 роки тому +1

      @@mothlightmedia1936 it doesn't have to be your next video. You can decide what you want to do next since everything you post is gold and very interesting. You deserve more subscribers.

    • @mothlightmedia1936
      @mothlightmedia1936  4 роки тому +1

      Thank you I appreciate it

  • @kakaeriko
    @kakaeriko Рік тому

    how are people not curious about this, should be 10m views+

  • @WORLDCRUSHER9000
    @WORLDCRUSHER9000 4 роки тому +45

    There really isn't a line between life and chemical reactions

    • @mothlightmedia1936
      @mothlightmedia1936  4 роки тому +30

      I agree, the point I was making was more that it doesn't feel like it and viruses remind us of this

    • @luishurtado3377
      @luishurtado3377 4 роки тому +4

      When I was in junior high school I once said maybe we are just walking chemical reactions

    • @rock_it9771
      @rock_it9771 4 роки тому +2

      There is a line. You learned that in 5th class probably....

    • @luishurtado3377
      @luishurtado3377 4 роки тому

      @@Nazqua thanks! But I don't think I am

  • @wanderlustexcursion
    @wanderlustexcursion Рік тому

    very informative content

  • @kazkk2321
    @kazkk2321 3 роки тому +1

    Ppl should appreciate viruses more. There should be a whole museum dedicated to viruses and bacteria

  • @sevehayden1463
    @sevehayden1463 2 роки тому +1

    Some plant viruses are arguably mutualistic, triggering benificial biological changes like cold resistance.

  • @TheFreshSpam
    @TheFreshSpam 3 роки тому

    Amazing video

  • @benmcreynolds8581
    @benmcreynolds8581 2 роки тому

    We would consider other parasite's alive, so I would be leaning towards virus's being alive but also similar to a hybrid of spore's/plant pollen etc. Sorta like a genetic seed spore.

  • @aetherslugstar1889
    @aetherslugstar1889 4 роки тому +3

    I'd like to coin the term "stem life" to describe viruses.

    • @foxhound963
      @foxhound963 4 роки тому +2

      Sounds good, once we are sure it's true.

  • @jasonholden8830
    @jasonholden8830 2 місяці тому

    Thankyou!

  • @kazkk2321
    @kazkk2321 3 роки тому

    The volatile environment of early earth would be highly detrimental to RNA and its simplicity . What evolutionary pressures would allow them to evoke and what hosts did they initially infect?

  • @onetallpheeesh
    @onetallpheeesh Рік тому

    Bacteriophages look like sentient living creatures 🙃
    If life can be that small, I wonder how large it can be.

  • @UATU.
    @UATU. 4 роки тому +7

    Very interesting, thank you

  • @ARCtheCartoonMaster
    @ARCtheCartoonMaster 2 роки тому

    "this phenomena"
    Man, this videos must have taken a keen eyes to proofread.

  • @WilhelmDrake
    @WilhelmDrake 4 роки тому +1

    Obligate Intracellular Parasites.
    I think there are very good reasons for classifying them as alive.

  • @penocasino
    @penocasino 3 роки тому

    Nature is horrifyingly beautiful.

  • @dakotaraptor5918
    @dakotaraptor5918 4 роки тому +3

    “Demonetised: reason: current events”

  • @boi.9936
    @boi.9936 4 роки тому +9

    When you mentioned the viroids being just a bundle of genetic material, it got me thinking; what if viroids are the result of the RNA escape hypothesis you mentioned earlier? It would still be possible for the viroids to mutate or even start out with a coating too. I find it pretty unlikely that viruses would evolve first, because they wouldn't even have the necessary parts to replicate themselves anyways, even if they're extremely simple.

    • @juanausensi499
      @juanausensi499 2 роки тому +1

      I'm with you on this. I also think that different viruses can have different origins, so it's possible that every origin theory mentioned in the video is true. Parasitic beings tend to reduce their complexity, and used to be more complex before taking the parasitic path. So the similitudes we see in viruses are only because we are seeing the end result, but different viruses could came from very different organisms.

    • @suelane3628
      @suelane3628 Рік тому

      The hypothesis is that retro viruses evolved first from the first metabolism to evolve, and the possibility of an RNA world. The metabolism happened first followed by cells (archaeal & bacterial.) This appears to have happened quickly (in geological time) so maybe the RNA elements could also have had to form a capsule to invade cells. Unfortunately for the hypothesis todays bacteriophages are DNA based, not RNA or even retro-viruses.

  • @blastulae
    @blastulae 4 роки тому

    Viruses aren't all pathogens. Even some of those which are, ie phages, help people. But beyond that, some think that the nuclei of eukaryotic cells derive from viruses, and it's likely that placentas evolved with the aid of a virus. To name but a few viral effects positive for all eukaryotes and for us placental mammals.

  • @neub4321
    @neub4321 4 роки тому +1

    Generally, I like your educational videos. But the lack of overall structure (absence of course design) and the monotone delivery make it hard to see how the parts and videos fit together. Because of other production values, you may still generate a lot of views.

  • @dougthedonkey1805
    @dougthedonkey1805 4 роки тому

    So if it’s basically some RNA and protein around it, how does it die if it’s just left out in the open for a few days? Does it dry out or something?

    • @LimeyLassen
      @LimeyLassen 4 роки тому +2

      Yeah, just basic wear and tear.

    • @dougthedonkey1805
      @dougthedonkey1805 4 роки тому

      @Limey Lassen how does something that small get worn and torn though?

    • @LimeyLassen
      @LimeyLassen 4 роки тому +4

      @@dougthedonkey1805 UV light and oxygen, mainly. Same reason paint fades and metal rusts.

    • @dougthedonkey1805
      @dougthedonkey1805 4 роки тому

      @Limey Lassen I see, thanks!

  • @Night-Lord
    @Night-Lord 3 роки тому

    I just wanna point out that, simply do to their structure, bacteriophages are one of the scariest things in nature to me

  • @grandwonder5858
    @grandwonder5858 4 роки тому

    Make a video explaining the difference between a virus and a bacteria please!

    • @boi.9936
      @boi.9936 4 роки тому

      The difference is actually pretty simple, bacteria have the parts and proteins to replicate themselves, while viruses don't.

    • @eolgrillo
      @eolgrillo 4 роки тому +1

      He just explained it, bacteria are alive and have the proteins and things that it needs to procreate, while viruses are not alive and don't have the proteins and things it need to procreate by itself.

  • @Jon58004
    @Jon58004 3 роки тому

    How do you know if the shared viral DNA between species is due to a common ancestor vs due to a virus that can infect both species?

    • @caviramus0993
      @caviramus0993 3 роки тому +2

      since each time virus infects other cells and in case of ERVs they nest themselves in unique place after each infection. By this having ERVs in 2 different species implies a common ancestor that got this retrovirus and its remnants were passed down further. The probability that the retrovirus nested itself a few times in the exact same places is highly unlikely. What's more some of these ERVs are mutated in the same way, making it even more unlikely to happen separately.

  • @ChristineInNornia
    @ChristineInNornia 2 роки тому

    Spillover by David Quammen is worth reading if you enjoyed this excellent and fascinating video✨

  • @keatonpgaming4398
    @keatonpgaming4398 3 роки тому

    Viruses be like: ayo ima just be so parasitic that I need a different organism to live on

  • @crinsombone5380
    @crinsombone5380 3 роки тому +1

    If viruses are indeed living creatures does that mean that LUCA isn't universal? Or are viruses related to something?

  • @pannobhasa
    @pannobhasa Рік тому

    Short version: scientists still don't know how viruses evolved.

  • @Tapecutter59
    @Tapecutter59 3 роки тому

    Life is chemistry, no line to blur.

    • @dj_koen1265
      @dj_koen1265 2 роки тому +1

      But Not all chemistry is life

  • @aleisterlavey9716
    @aleisterlavey9716 4 роки тому

    Could it be, that the blind watchmaker got lucky and out of pure Randomnes some aminoacids formed some kind of Viroid, that got attached to a multicell organism, wich enabled its survival in the first place, if it didn't reduced the fitness for survival?

  • @user-qm8by7sh6m
    @user-qm8by7sh6m 2 місяці тому

    Viruses are like the microscopic equivalent of the uncanny valley

  • @ezachleewright2309
    @ezachleewright2309 3 роки тому

    Not all viruses are parasitic. You could say that WO, a bacteriophage to Wolbachia, is mutualistic, not parasitic.

  • @mgevirtz
    @mgevirtz Рік тому

    hang on, can you rule out bromoviridae entering humans and marmosets at different times? You said "very similar".

  • @joe_croupier
    @joe_croupier 4 роки тому

    They are smart ....................... Q: can a virus live in a host forever without killing it ?

  • @ttrestle
    @ttrestle 2 роки тому

    War of the Worlds made me realize how terrifying viruses and bacteria are.

  • @jamesgreep9344
    @jamesgreep9344 4 роки тому +1

    I don’t envy geneticists. I’m a neurology student. I literally study the most complex machine in the universe and one of the least understood fields of science, and I think their job is still far more confusing.

  • @ryanfitzalan8634
    @ryanfitzalan8634 3 роки тому

    So this distills theory down to whether or not DNA/RNA existed autonomously before cellular formations and possible caused cellular formations or; Cellular formations occurred before/simultaneously and acted as micro-segregating environments for autonomous DNA/RNA or autonomous proteins that became RNA/DNA, thus forming RNA/DNA. OR perhaps its somewhere in between....
    perhaps abundant early uranium leeched radiation through marine vents, where chemically derived organic proteins that had settled near the bottom, would be churned upwards towards surface waters. Random congealment of the proteins (like snowflake formations) forming proto DNA and RNA, while creating connective lipid congealment's as a by-product. the inevitable trapping of congealed proteins within proto cellular lipid structures, would be continually exposed to intense radiation upon each churning upward lift, damaging proto-RNA/DNA structures within those proto-cells at random until only the most rigid radiation resistant formation (real proto-RNA/DNA) was left behind in non-reproducing proto-cells. These resilient proto-cell structures would naturally shrink and expand in palpating motions by thermal energy exposure near the vents, making their cell walls penetrable to new RNA/DNA material which would react at random with the internal "well-formed" proto-DNA/RNA. This would eventually cause a proto-cell to expand and "bud off" a mirror image of itself in the first act of "Thermal energy dependent proto-cellular replication". This would explain how advanced RNA/and DNA could form from radiation, and how the resultant "phenomena of life" is dependent on an energy input for reproduction. Its also a fairly simple process, which would automatically occur once surface oceans form, explaining why life seemingly "immediately arises" after earths cooling began. It might insinuate that all earth-like planets would have this happen and that the "phenomena of life" is always convergent in basic micro-design.

  • @TheGreatMoonFrog
    @TheGreatMoonFrog 4 роки тому +4

    I mean there is no line between life and chemical reactions. It's not like there is any part of complex life that isn't a chemical reaction occuring.

  • @veryunusual126
    @veryunusual126 2 роки тому

    Man, I love your videos so much,
    they always teach me something new and interesting 💪💪👍👍🔥🔥

  • @eschwarz1003
    @eschwarz1003 3 роки тому +1

    how are viroids chemically stabilized?

  • @mhorram
    @mhorram 3 роки тому +1

    The fact that the virus is made up of protein tells you something about when it evolved. It did NOT evolve before cells. Why? Because proteins do NOT appear out of random chemical processes in Nature. They only get created inside cells. In fact, they are produced in the nucleus. An important fact to keep in mind is that proteins when created in the nucleus don't work! They have to be folded in very precise ways before they are capable of carrying out their intended function. No specific fold no functionality at all. That folding, too, is carried out in the nucleus of the cell. After that, there is a quality assurance stage that allows the properly folded protein to leave the nucleus and go to the cell proper where it will perform its intended function. If the protein fails the Q.A. check it is destroyed!
    So, if trillions of years were granted to create a protein randomly in Nature; that would avail nothing as it wouldn't have the folding required to make it functional. Also, as you say, viruses need cells to replicate. So, whatever protein appeared randomly would not be able to replicate and quite quickly would be destroyed by ultraviolet light in the environment!
    Now, something that goes on in the creation of human red blood cells may provide a clue to the origin of viruses. The red blood cell in all mammals starts of with a nucleus; but that nucleus for whatever reason is ejected from the cell. This happens in us millions of times every second. www.sydney.edu.au/research/opportunities/opportunities/1165?faculty=11
    It may be that whatever started this process, called enucleation, in our far distant past led to the ejection of parts of the nucleus in a form that roughly complies with what we now call a virus. When I say, our, I mean to refer to all mammals. Birds, reptiles, amphibians and fish do not enucleate.
    Another curious thing about red cells, called erythrocytes, is they don't possess organelles such as the mitochondria. The process that purged them from mammalian cells long ago (assuming they were purged) may have dumped them out as incomplete protein chains which acted like modern day viruses (i.e. reentered the cell and replicated with the help of the cell).

  • @YEs69th420
    @YEs69th420 3 роки тому +1

    I recall there being this incredible idea to reprogram retroviruses (something we can already do) and intentionally infecting ourselves with them to recode our own DNA and solve all sorts of problems. Very exciting possibility.

    • @caviramus0993
      @caviramus0993 3 роки тому

      viruses are already being used as genetic vectors

  • @nicholaspikos7012
    @nicholaspikos7012 2 роки тому

    Kind of mimicked in our imagination with creatures like vampire's. Even the name undead. Is this art mimicking life?😁

  • @blaizewood1871
    @blaizewood1871 2 роки тому +1

    Y'all should level up and hire an animator!

  • @HinaCabina
    @HinaCabina 3 роки тому

    Damn it hate how this is relative now

  • @teguenjoyer3842
    @teguenjoyer3842 3 роки тому

    My hypothesis: viruses are an alien experiment.

  • @mrmagpie3637
    @mrmagpie3637 3 роки тому

    R and a sounds like a music genre

  • @daywalker3735
    @daywalker3735 3 роки тому

    Do some viruses really look like strange mechanical spiders???

    • @hmad898
      @hmad898 2 роки тому +1

      yea, the model is actually pretty accurate. theres microscopic photos even. they attach with the legs and inject through their tube structure

  • @Mythographology
    @Mythographology 4 роки тому

    Ken Ham is a patron???? Surely not THE Ken Ham: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_Ham