Chromosome 1 - The Stuff of Life

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  • Опубліковано 29 лис 2013
  • EXPLORE THE RI ADVENT CALENDAR: rigb.org/advent
    Geneticist Aoife Mclysaght introduces the Ri advent calendar 2013 - our video journey through the human genome. Each day in December we'll release a new short film focussing on the 23 pairs of human chromosomes and the mitochondrial DNA that make up the building blocks of human life.
    Starting with the largest human chromosome - chromosome 1 - Aoife explores how genes are organised and how genetic information is passed from one generation to the next.
    Don't miss the 2013 CHRISTMAS LECTURES on BBC Four and BBC iPlayer: rigb.org/christmas-lectures
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  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 53

  • @TheRoyalInstitution
    @TheRoyalInstitution  10 років тому +22

    Happy advent everyone!

    • @thofus
      @thofus 10 років тому +3

      Thank you, and you too. Thank you for the advent series.

  • @kanklbot1466
    @kanklbot1466 10 років тому

    This sounds brilliant! Can't wait for tomorrows episode!

  • @whatif5532
    @whatif5532 10 років тому

    This video has got me excited for all the other videos!

  • @tsm1013
    @tsm1013 10 років тому

    Looking forward to all im going to learn throughout the series. Thanks!

  • @andio393
    @andio393 10 років тому +2

    Looking forward to this series :)

  • @HexerPsy
    @HexerPsy 10 років тому

    Cant wait for more :D Bring it!

  • @VideoGamerDerek
    @VideoGamerDerek 10 років тому +1

    can't wait for more!

  • @AbhijeetBorkar
    @AbhijeetBorkar 10 років тому +3

    She looks like Prof Brian Cox! Looking forward to this interesting series.

  • @Missnaughty011
    @Missnaughty011 10 років тому +2

    Woohoo I'm excited. I like the presenter's accent

  • @Pablogogo
    @Pablogogo 10 років тому

    Natural History Museum looks great, wonderful that it is open again.

  • @hendrikhendrikson2941
    @hendrikhendrikson2941 10 років тому

    So cute, and so interesting.
    Can't wait for more !

  • @tuskinekinase
    @tuskinekinase 10 років тому +1

    The wools are soooooo adorable!

  • @gluglamana
    @gluglamana 10 років тому

    sounds like a good idea

  • @marscrumbs
    @marscrumbs 4 роки тому

    While we know how within the double helix how pairs of bases match up, how is it that sister chromosome know one another? It isn’t AT GC hydrogen bonds between two different homologous strains.

  • @timlandscheidt
    @timlandscheidt 10 років тому +1

    I was fascinated by the video until I saw the first name of the presenter. Four vowels and one consonant? How can the miracle of life keep up with that? :-)

  • @StephenMortimer
    @StephenMortimer 10 років тому +5

    what a sweetie! (the kind mothers-in-law dream of)

  • @evtreexiii6868
    @evtreexiii6868 6 років тому +2

    I love the accent

    • @derlinclaire1778
      @derlinclaire1778 5 років тому +1

      She,s probably Irish,I imagine..Quite an intelligent sounding lady.God bless her.

  • @dottorbarbaro
    @dottorbarbaro 10 років тому

    where is this museum?

    • @aoifemclysaght3586
      @aoifemclysaght3586 10 років тому +1

      It's the Natural History Museum in Dublin www.museum.ie/en/intro/natural-history.aspx

  • @adamtaylor106
    @adamtaylor106 10 років тому +1

    This video appeared to sepperate homologous pairs, instead of sister chromatids, which is not correct when illustrating mitosis.

    • @mclysaga
      @mclysaga 10 років тому

      Who said it's mitosis? ... just imagine it's anaphase II of meiosis. :-)

    • @adamtaylor106
      @adamtaylor106 10 років тому

      Yes, it could be haploid mitosis, but that is a bit of a stretch.

    • @mclysaga
      @mclysaga 10 років тому

      Adam Taylor Not mitosis, meiosis. Anaphase 2 looks like this www.phschool.com/science/biology_place/biocoach/meiosis/anaii.html
      But in any case, this wasn't about explaining cell division, if it was I would have modelled DNA replication and centromeres and spindle and all. This is just playdough to illustrate one point regarding chromosomes. It is a simplification.

    • @adamtaylor106
      @adamtaylor106 10 років тому

      Meiosis 2 is the same thing as mitosis involving haploid numbers of chromosomes. What she demonstrated cannot be considered meiosis as she did not show the first half.

    • @mclysaga
      @mclysaga 10 років тому

      Adam Taylor She is me actually, so I can consider it as meiosis 2. This isn't a demonstration of cell division. It is accurate enough for the purpose of this video.

  • @ab35875
    @ab35875 7 років тому +1

    13

  • @guitarttimman
    @guitarttimman 9 років тому

    I think what was confused about me is that I wanted to destroy the world. But, that's incorrect.
    I only wanted to eliminate the torment part for us.

  • @Tomswift1234
    @Tomswift1234 10 років тому

    The music is so good, does anybody know what the song is? (The first one)

    • @TheRoyalInstitution
      @TheRoyalInstitution  10 років тому

      Music by Mermonte and Oskar Schuster (see credit slides at end)

    • @Tomswift1234
      @Tomswift1234 10 років тому +1

      The Royal Institution Sorry about that, I was listening to the audio and didn't see the credits.

  • @kev9879
    @kev9879 5 років тому

    Mala has a million and 1 uses.

  • @paulflute
    @paulflute 10 років тому

    So do you not regard viruses as 'alive' then..?

  • @JGAN
    @JGAN 10 років тому

    what is the nice song name?

    • @TheRoyalInstitution
      @TheRoyalInstitution  10 років тому +1

      Music by Mermonte and Oskar Schuster (see credit slides at end)

    • @JGAN
      @JGAN 10 років тому

      The Royal Institution
      ah thanks was looking for the one by mermonte

  • @BobMcLaughlin1138
    @BobMcLaughlin1138 10 років тому

    I have the same scar on my finger that she has at 2:13!

  • @MilMike
    @MilMike 10 років тому +1

    Awesome, is it true that a potato had more chromosomes than a human?

  • @daisy1691
    @daisy1691 3 роки тому

    anyone else from school?

  • @silvergirl1980
    @silvergirl1980 2 роки тому

    My son is missing most of his first chromosome both x and y

  • @JohnStephenWeck
    @JohnStephenWeck 7 років тому

    Greetings all. Life is not about replication, so DNA or chromosomes are in no way the basis of life.
    Life means cyclic processors exist in the system. Cyclic processors are machines that take lots of power to keep the cycle going, so you need a sizable power supply. Processors have a lifespan, which is how long the processor is going. To be alive, all biological or technological systems must have at least one cyclic processor operating. Suspension means the processor has temporarily stopped. Death is defined as a cyclic processor that can’t be restarted. It doesn’t matter what the processor is made of, what its contained function is, or whether it’s replicating. Conceptually, you can think of a cyclic processor as a software loop or process.
    Let’s use an air vortex example. Air can blow down the street as wind, from high to low potential - this is not life. If a dust devil forms and moves down the street you have a simple lifeform (the same with a tornado). The difference is that a processor has formed. It takes energy, it keeps on going, it has a lifespan, and it repeats the same basic process again and again. You can kill it by either removing its power supply, or interfering with its processor structure. Simple life forms of all types are always coming into and out of existence. Complex biological life has a cyclic processor based factory to allow them replicate, and evolve over time.
    For humans, cyclic processors define life and death - things like lungs, circulatory systems, and brains, need to be “kept going”. In other words - air processors, fluid processors, and information processors need to be kept cycling. This is a large part of what physicians are measuring with their equipment. Robots (artificial animals) have their own set of processors you can start and stop, so life and death applies to them as well.
    All factories (including ribosomes and universal assemblers) are alive because they contain (or are) cyclic processors, not because they can manufacture or replicate something. Viruses are not alive because they have no processors - they use a living factory in a cell to copy themselves. Cells are alive because they are processor heaven.
    Thanks for listening.

    • @weetzybat
      @weetzybat 6 років тому

      Can I get a tl;dr?

  • @zenzylok
    @zenzylok 10 років тому +1

  • @almightyyt2101
    @almightyyt2101 5 років тому

    Clicked bc it was 4:20?

  • @onlyCreativity
    @onlyCreativity 10 років тому

    every living thing has dna? noht really.

  • @dphotographyj3829
    @dphotographyj3829 5 років тому

    Why don't you tell us what our dna is mixed with..... We certainly are not just an evolved species... We are a separate species