UCLA CTSI
UCLA CTSI
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CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Costas Lyssiotis
Costas Lyssiotis, PhD
Associate Professor, Molecular & Integrative
Physiology
Associate Professor, Internal Medicine,
Division of Gastroenterology
DGSOM Theme: Regenerative Medine Research Theme
Recording Date: 05/29/2024
Co-sponsored by the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine Themes
For additional information, please contact:
ctsiseminar@mednet.ucla.edu
zhlédnutí: 48

Video

CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Aaron Gitler
zhlédnutí 101Před 9 hodinami
Aaron Gitler, PhD Professor, Genetics Member, Bio-X Member, Wu Tsai Neuroscience Institute Stanford University DGSOM Theme: Neuroscience Research Theme Recording Date: 05/22/2024 Co-sponsored by the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine Themes For additional information, please contact: ctsiseminar@mednet.ucla.edu
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Christian Frezza
zhlédnutí 132Před 9 hodinami
Christian Freeza, PhD Professor, Metabolomics in Aging University of Cologne DGSOM Theme: Metabolism Research Theme Recording Date: 05/15/2024 Co-sponsored by the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine Themes For additional information, please contact: ctsiseminar@mednet.ucla.edu
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Elana J. Fertig
zhlédnutí 95Před 21 dnem
Elana J. Fertig Division Director, Oncology Quantitative Sciences Professor, Oncology John Hopkins University DGSOM Theme: Regenerative Medicine Research Theme Recording Date: 05/08/2024 Co-sponsored by the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine Themes For additional information, please contact: ctsiseminar@mednet.ucla.edu
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Joseph S. Takahashi
zhlédnutí 65Před 21 dnem
Joseph S. Takahashi Department of Neuroscience UT Southwestern Medical Center DGSOM Theme: Neuroscience Research Theme Recording Date: 05/01/2024 Co-sponsored by the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine Themes For additional information, please contact: ctsiseminar@mednet.ucla.edu
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Dan Kastner
zhlédnutí 96Před měsícem
Dan Kastner, MD, PhD NIH National Human Genome Research Institute Scientific Director, Intramural Research of National Human Genome Research Institute DGSOM Theme: Precision Health Research Theme Recording Date: 04/17/2024 Co-sponsored by the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine Themes For additional information, please contact: ctsiseminar@mednet.ucla.edu
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Dame Carol Robinson
zhlédnutí 84Před měsícem
Dame Carol Robinson, DBE, FRS, FMedSCi, FRSC University of Oxford Director, Kavli Institute for Nanoscience; Professor of Chemistry DGSOM Theme: Neuroscience Research Theme Recording Date: 04/10/2024 Co-sponsored by the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine Themes For additional information, please contact: ctsiseminar@mednet.ucla.edu
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Stephen Chanock
zhlédnutí 70Před 2 měsíci
Stephen Chanock, MD NCI Division of Cancer Epidemiology & Genetics Director, Division of Cancer Epidemiology & Genetics DGSOM Theme: Cancer Research Theme Recording Date: 04/03/2024 Co-sponsored by the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine Themes For additional information, please contact: ctsiseminar@mednet.ucla.edu
Defeating Sickle Cell Disease by Enrolling in an NIH Gene Therapy Trial: Lynndrick Holmes’ Story
zhlédnutí 61Před 2 měsíci
Date: March 21, 2024 Hosted by the UCLA CTSI Community Engagement and Research Program, this webinar will delve deep into the barriers faced while navigating a gene therapy trial conducted by the National Institutes of Health to cure Mr. Lynndrick Holmes of sickle cell disease. Provided by the UCLA CTSI
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Crystal Lee
zhlédnutí 44Před 2 měsíci
Crystal Lee, PhD, MPH, MLS Indigenous Health and United Natives Assistance Professor of Population Health DGSOM Theme: Health Equity Research Theme Recording Date: 02/14/2024 Co-sponsored by the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine Themes For additional information, please contact: ctsiseminar@mednet.ucla.edu
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I John Carethers
zhlédnutí 65Před 2 měsíci
John Carethers, MD UC San Diego Vice Chancellor of Health Sciences Former Chief of the Division of Gastroenterology DGSOM Theme: Cancer Research Theme Recording Date: 03/13/2024 Co-sponsored by the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine Themes For additional information, please contact: ctsiseminar@mednet.ucla.edu
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Janai Carr-Ascher
zhlédnutí 109Před 3 měsíci
Janai Carr-Ascher, MD, PhD UC Davis Assistant Professor, Division of Hematology and Oncology, Internal Medicine DGSOM Theme: Regenerative Medicine Research Theme Recording Date: 02/21/2023 Co-sponsored by the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine Themes For additional information, please contact: ctsiseminar@mednet.ucla.edu
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Jonathan Kipnis
zhlédnutí 622Před 4 měsíci
Jonathan Kipnis, PhD Washington University in St. Louis Director of Brain Immunology and Gilia (BIG) Center Professor of Neurology, Neuroscience and Neurosurgery DGSOM Theme: I3T Research Theme Recording Date: 01/31/2024 Co-sponsored by the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine Themes For additional information, please contact: ctsiseminar@mednet.ucla.edu
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Bartley Griffith
zhlédnutí 31Před 4 měsíci
Bartley Griffith, MD, FACS, FRCS University of Maryland Director of the Cardiac and Lung Transplant Programs DGSOM Theme: Cardiovascular Research Theme Recording Date: 01/17/2024 Co-sponsored by the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine Themes For additional information, please contact: ctsiseminar@mednet.ucla.edu
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Dana Cuff
zhlédnutí 62Před 5 měsíci
Dana Cuff, PhD UCLA Director of cityLab Professor, Architecture and Urban Design DGSOM Theme: Healthy Equity Research Theme Recording Date: 12/13/2023 Co-sponsored by the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine Themes For additional information, please contact: ctsiseminar@mednet.ucla.edu
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Alcino Silva
zhlédnutí 151Před 6 měsíci
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Alcino Silva
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Richard Finkel
zhlédnutí 113Před 6 měsíci
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Richard Finkel
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Barry London
zhlédnutí 134Před 7 měsíci
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Barry London
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Eraka Bath
zhlédnutí 70Před 7 měsíci
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Eraka Bath
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Ana Fernandez-Sesma
zhlédnutí 186Před 7 měsíci
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Ana Fernandez-Sesma
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Nancy Cox
zhlédnutí 198Před 11 měsíci
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Nancy Cox
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Peter Crompton
zhlédnutí 94Před 11 měsíci
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Peter Crompton
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Yvonne Chen
zhlédnutí 455Před rokem
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Yvonne Chen
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Robert Lefkowitz
zhlédnutí 761Před rokem
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Robert Lefkowitz
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Carol Barnes
zhlédnutí 228Před rokem
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Carol Barnes
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Brian MacVicar
zhlédnutí 212Před rokem
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Brian MacVicar
Policy Briefs 101 Workshop
zhlédnutí 161Před rokem
Policy Briefs 101 Workshop
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Barry Byrne
zhlédnutí 220Před rokem
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Barry Byrne
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Catherine Wu
zhlédnutí 573Před rokem
CTSI Distinguished Speaker Series I Catherine Wu
Overview of Major T32 Changes for 2023
zhlédnutí 149Před rokem
Overview of Major T32 Changes for 2023

Komentáře

  • @MsMousepusher
    @MsMousepusher Před 24 dny

    I wish I could understand this, but it feels very important for understanding what happens if the wrong lipids are in the cells.

  • @colinczerwinski2295
    @colinczerwinski2295 Před 28 dny

    Jack Kruse brought me here.

  • @PieterJanssensPMJJ
    @PieterJanssensPMJJ Před měsícem

    Had to speed it up 1.5x to get a decent pace. Just kidding, a fantastic jam packed mito talk.

  • @Lukas-ye4wz
    @Lukas-ye4wz Před 2 měsíci

    🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: 00:50 *🧬 Common complex diseases like Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, diabetes, and obesity remain poorly understood despite vast research funding.* 02:41 *📚 Thomas Kuhn's idea of paradigms in science highlights the importance of initial conceptual frameworks in shaping scientific understanding.* 05:14 *⚡️ Energy, particularly mitochondrial function, plays a crucial role in health and disease beyond traditional anatomical perspectives.* 07:17 *🔬 Bioenergetic dysfunction is proposed as the root cause of common complex diseases, shifting focus from anatomy to energy metabolism.* 16:04 *💡 Mitochondrial DNA inheritance from maternal lineage ensures conservation of energy circuitry, vital for cellular function.* 21:20 *🧠 Different tissues have varying reliance on mitochondrial energy, leading to tissue-specific symptoms in mitochondrial dysfunction.* 22:30 *🔬 Mitochondrial bioenergetics play a crucial role in regulating energy, reactive oxygen species, and cellular function, affecting various aspects of health.* 23:13 *🧬 Inhibited mitochondrial function can lead to energy deficits, DNA replication errors, and age-related decline, potentially contributing to the onset and progression of common diseases.* 24:22 *⚕️ Certain mitochondrial mutations can result in diverse phenotypes, ranging from neurological symptoms to metabolic disorders, illustrating the complexity of mitochondrial genetics.* 26:38 *🧪 Transcriptomic analysis reveals distinct gene expression patterns in response to different levels of mitochondrial mutations, indicating a fine-tuned regulatory mechanism.* 27:18 *🔄 Nuclear-cytoplasmic interactions are essential for understanding mitochondrial pathology and disease manifestation.* 30:44 *🧠 Mitochondrial mutations can have varying effects on phenotype, influencing neurological disorders, diabetes, and cardiomyopathy, highlighting the importance of mitochondrial genetics in disease.* 35:19 *🌍 Geographic distribution of mitochondrial DNA variants suggests adaptation to environmental factors, such as altitude and climate, influencing disease susceptibility.* 39:35 *🔄 Mitochondrial mutations may exhibit context-dependent effects, with variants showing both beneficial and detrimental outcomes depending on genetic backgrounds and environmental factors.* 44:52 *🏃 Mutant mice with mitochondrial mutations exhibit collapse during exercise, indicating a progressive mitochondrial dysfunction.* 46:14 *🍔 Mutant mice with high mitochondrial levels resist high-fat diets and display insulin sensitivity, contrary to expectations.* 47:08 *🧠 Mice with mitochondrial mutations exhibit subtle behavioral changes, indicating potential links between energetics and personality traits.* 50:11 *⚡ Partial mitochondrial defects can affect long-range migration of neurons, potentially contributing to neurological disorders like schizophrenia or autism.* 53:07 *🔬 Research suggests mitochondrial bioenergetics could bridge Western and Eastern medical approaches, potentially impacting treatments like herbal medicine and acupuncture.* 57:19 *🧬 Mitochondria serve as environmental sensors, communicating with the nucleus to maintain homeostasis; dysfunction leads to bioenergetic decline, disease, and aging.* Made with HARPA AI

  • @avocat215
    @avocat215 Před 2 měsíci

    Wish he would slow down

  • @OIOnaut
    @OIOnaut Před 3 měsíci

    He is our guru ( bioquantum hackers) too bad he has no time to go sub atomic. I have. Thanks to a career in solid state physics, semiconductors and biohackin’ and finally the disasterous health outcomes now over turned. Only if one gets very sick, will they become motivated to connect the dots of pharma history, funding of research, biology, quantum effects and etiology of mitochondrion dysfunction👏🏻

  • @milofonbil
    @milofonbil Před 3 měsíci

    Kids really need good fresh food that's not processed. A lot of health problems come from the high sugar and that's in shelf stable food. Poor people are often obese due to highly processed food.

  • @safiyegurlevik8651
    @safiyegurlevik8651 Před 4 měsíci

    Bu semineri Türkçe 🇹🇷 çeviri de eklemenizi de rica etsem

  • @raykinney9907
    @raykinney9907 Před 5 měsíci

    Do mitochondria have a form of quorum sensing communication?

  • @Sunnyfield323
    @Sunnyfield323 Před 7 měsíci

    Can anyone brilliant provide time stamps and summary .., I see this is more more true it’s about the energetics and I really think NAD creatine ubiquinol, magnesium and carnitine can be very helpful

  • @ailurus5869
    @ailurus5869 Před 8 měsíci

    Thank you for sharing this inspiring lecture! It's helpful to my own project. ❤

  • @Sam-fp8zm
    @Sam-fp8zm Před 8 měsíci

    fantastic presentation. thanks.

  • @christopherellis2663
    @christopherellis2663 Před 9 měsíci

    57:25 cristæhyets

  • @YourLifeRedefined
    @YourLifeRedefined Před 9 měsíci

    I wonder where she gets her money from? Conflicts of interest anyone? Low carb or carnivore diet would have this subject feeling better than ever within a few months, guaranteed. But that doesn’t make as much money for docs and Big Pharma now does it? Doctors are just drug dealers and procedure pushers. They have no ability and most, no desire to push for actual health. Why do you think everyone is so sick?

  • @rezzer7918
    @rezzer7918 Před 10 měsíci

    👍👍👍👍👍 🧬🧬🧬🧬🧬 🔬🔬🔬🔬🔬 ⚗️⚗️⚗️⚗️⚗️ 👨‍🔬👨‍🔬👨‍🔬👨‍🔬👨‍🔬

  • @willingtolistentoyou
    @willingtolistentoyou Před 10 měsíci

    7:22

  • @martylawrence5532
    @martylawrence5532 Před 11 měsíci

    Quite simply everyone, there is a biological system already in place...therefore God-engineered, logistically...doing all of the classic adaptations. What is this biological system? It's called the epigenome. It's actions is called epigenetics. This includes adaptations seen in Darwin Finches without any natural selection of DNA mutations. Instead it's modifications by chemical tagging turning genes up and down or on and off for different structures such as new beaks for new diets. This is FAST...doing its job in just 2 generations, not millions of years by 'evolution'. Evolution is a scam folks. We are an intelligent design by Jesus Christ. This means he offers a free gift of eternal life just for believing in it and believing he resurrected. Take the free gift today!!!

  • @robokill387
    @robokill387 Před 11 měsíci

    You fail to mention that a lot of the people with "neuropsychiatric disorders" don't see them as disorders and don't want a cure. The definition of mental "disorders" and "cures" can be as much due to societal, especially neoliberalism capitalist values as it has to do with science.

  • @pranaynijhawan
    @pranaynijhawan Před rokem

    Mitochondrial dysfunction leads to chronic kidney failure. Then mitochondrial reactivation should lead to reversal of chronic kidney failure.

  • @jaytee9249
    @jaytee9249 Před rokem

    The only two things I find missing in this lecture are one a creationist perspective and two the effects that the introduction of vaccines have had on this system. I realize this perspective is not popular but it is real. I appreciate the lecture and I believe there plenty of nuggets in here. The logic makes sense but if we only presume that evolution is fact we can become mislead. I believe that mutations have come from vaccines because many of these diseases we did not have prior to there introduction into the population along with EMFs and non native light.

  • @davidganem2161
    @davidganem2161 Před rokem

    thank you for the intresting lecture

  • @dustyfeller
    @dustyfeller Před rokem

    21:10 Mito energy utilized by the brain is 20% :: 5% < loss mito energy could preferentially = headache

  • @julzee111
    @julzee111 Před rokem

    We know why you don’t find the most basic of answers to medical issues plaguing Americans. Because medicine isn’t about curing illness it’s about producing synthetic medication’s. Dad user does more damage in the end than it does. Good paradigm. Western medicine was co-opted by the Rockefellers in the 20s, forcing out all holistic doctors, many of which had recent breakthroughs in disease and in treating and curing those diseases. Many of these doctors were put out of business or worse. Rockefeller being the oil man that he was, then put as the objective for Western medicine, to use oil based synthetic medication’s to treat American disease. But let’s be clear not to curate, to manage symptoms things like chemotherapy, that sure, kills cancer, along with your mitochondria and damages, various organs, etc. that should you survive it, decreases your lifespan dramatically, but chemotherapy isn’t just for cancer anymore! No, chemotherapy drugs have been used to treat the mythological AIDS virus And is even being used unbeknownst to the majority of Americans, as an antibiotic. One of the most prescribed antibiotics. - Cipro. So if you’ve been prescribed Cipro say for a urinary tract infection or a sinus infection, congratulations, you’ve just completed your first, second, third, fourth… Round of chemo therapy and if you think your body has a suffered consequences, think again. It damages your mitochondria and causes all kinds of diseases, like diabetes, high blood pressure, and a long list of other diseases that Western medicine just chocks up to bad diet and aging. Face it people, we have all been taken for a big ride.

  • @robyn3349
    @robyn3349 Před rokem

    Thank you!

  • @olinelizondo414
    @olinelizondo414 Před rokem

    hi jenny

  • @Rene-uz3eb
    @Rene-uz3eb Před rokem

    Having just watched another mitochondria talk (Chandel), it seems to me that autoimmune disease stems from lack of energy production in regulatory T cells. They showed that if you take out the mitochondria, the T cells survive and multiply just fine, but they stop taking any actions based on antigens, which resulted in autoimmunity for example. Although they argue that it’s lack of h2o2 produced by the mitochondria which is a needed signaling function: maybe so, but that h2o2 can only be produced when energy production is ramped up in the mitochondria (from the calcium signal), so if mitochondrial atp production is lacking, it won’t get that h2o2 signal either. And here’s the really interesting part. Excess iron in the mitochondria causes excess ROS via the Fenton reaction, producing super radical/hydroxyl OH from H2O2, which is very damaging. So it at the same time takes away the H2O2 signal needed by the treg to function. We shouldn’t throw all ROS in the same pot, these have opposite effects.

    • @aywitb911
      @aywitb911 Před 11 měsíci

      just take methylene blue..

    • @ianthebubbian6182
      @ianthebubbian6182 Před 8 měsíci

      pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32738205/ this paper touches on what you're thinking, it may be of interest to you

    • @iuniversol
      @iuniversol Před 3 měsíci

      Whoa! I actually comprehended most of that 😅

  • @Rene-uz3eb
    @Rene-uz3eb Před rokem

    I think I’ve watched this before. Don’t think I have different conclusions. The point seems to be that mitochondrial dna gets mutated hence lack of energy. Is there any evidence whatsoever other than case studies? Would seem to be as rare as any genetic diseases. The idea is not well thought out. Since mtDNA inherits through the mother, any lineage with mitochondrial problems would never improve and quickly die out EDIT: unless there was a selective advantage which there probably is. As is known, US population has lost about half a degree of body temperature since 1940 across all age groups. The lower energy production which this is a sign of would likely be responsible for pushing these mutations to the edge of resulting in symptomatic disease. 37:55 this is I’ll founded speculation. Northern ancestors don’t need less coupling to produce more heat. First of all you have brown fat cells that can already do that, you don’t take away energy from every cell in the body. Second, people have been wearing warm clothes. I seriously don’t see what his point is. He goes on about breeding different mitochondrial mutations. If any of this was indicative of all the large increases in heart disease, cancer, diabetes etc then one could simply show that most patients share some of these causative mutations. Which clearly is not the case as all these diseases affect a similarly large population across geographies (eg in melting pots like the US), which mostly determines mtDNA EDIT: He shows that for some of the known symptomatic mutations, there is increased risk of Autism given certain haplotypes. I don’t recall the details but it was only significant in a few haplotypes, and risk factor < 2 for a low risk just says this predisposes you more than other populations, but isn’t an explanation why the diseases are on the rise across populations, especially as there doesn’t seem to be a rise in occurrence of these mutations. All I got from this is that the most common mutations are melas and lebers, which are rare, and have a very distinct symptomatic predisposition unlike what we see in he general population. 53:25 acupuncture works because it affects fascia which seems like a dynamic mold or mask around our body. Equating mitochondria with qi is a bit simplistic scientific, it’s pretty clear that most energy is produced in the mitochondria. Regarding Dr Wallace’s talks on mtDNA mutation increased heteroplasmy effect on disease and a paper that doesn’t see any correlation of the degree of hetplas with symptoms, it’s probably different haplotypes that make it appear random, ie some are susceptible some are not (can’t find the paper). He rarely mentions the fact that males are almost 10x more susceptible to develop symptoms, which renders his heteroplasmy graphs kind of useless for women. Regarding keto diet for improving melas, as he says a colleague is claiming, I’m looking at the evidence. But it doesn’t make sense to me because the mitochondria doesn’t see a difference between ketones and glucose, both enter it as acetylcoa. So if he sees a difference it’s probably just the standard claim that ketones enter the cell more easily than glucose in diabetes, nothing to do with mtDNA. For example, MCT transporters which move ketones into the cell, can be downregulated, just like the cell can become insulin resistant. Imo the cells are becoming energy resistant due to too much ROS, so it doesn’t matter if the energy arrives as glucose, fatty acid or ketones. In Alzheimer, downregulation of MCT has been implicated: Nitric oxide might be an inducing factor in cognitive impairment in Alzheimer's disease via downregulating the monocarboxylate transporter , 2019 “AMD3100 increases monocarboxylate transporters 1 (MCT1)” Subcutaneous Administration of AMD3100 into Mice Models of Alzheimer’s Disease Ameliorated Cognitive Impairment, Reduced Neuroinflammation, and Improved Pathophysiological Markers, 2020 EDIT: I have to say I’m utterly perplexed. Keto, which is a baseless fad in general, may turn out to be uniquely beneficial for the melas mutation? I don’t quite understand the results. They create a high heteroplasmy melas cell that has respiration issues and turns to glycolysis, then ketones turn it back to normal, but only starting after 2 weeks? Hard to speculate what’s going on. By replacing glucose for ketones, one thing that does change is the cell cannot use the energy from the initial glycolysis step, or even shift to glycolysis, to offload energy production. So maybe what happens is the forced usage of mitochondria over time shifts the heteroplasmy to a normal level, down from 90%, at which point it can produce more energy again. Also they casually mention that the control cells also generated 50% more atp after 4 weeks on ketones, so it seems that pure ketones for these in vivo brain cells (which never happens in nature) increases energy whether melas or not, after 4 weeks, which is a long time not running on any glucose. The addition of ketone bodies alleviates mitochondrial dysfunction by restoring complex I assembly in a MELAS cellular model, 2016

    • @tfoxen7518
      @tfoxen7518 Před 11 měsíci

      Many thanks. The acupuncture hypothesis was just too much for me. If the 'treatment ' was scientifically credible, why continue repetitive clinical trials? Is greater than 3,000 trials not enough?

    • @Rene-uz3eb
      @Rene-uz3eb Před 11 měsíci

      @@tfoxen7518 I don’t remember what he said about acupuncture, but I recall from some paper that acupuncture effectiveness may be more to do with stimulating the fascia layer under the skin.

  • @mayvr4814
    @mayvr4814 Před rokem

    Exelentes presentaciónes!!!

  • @gnweiss
    @gnweiss Před rokem

    Your "financial and political" distractions severely distract from your science and research, something you know little about (ref. Insurers, lawyers, Wall Street; form reflects function) Frankly your presentation has a huge dose of BS. Do better.

  • @medicalpanorama
    @medicalpanorama Před rokem

    ERMES simplifies the reproduction of Mitochondrion in Yeast/animal vs in Chloroplast/Algal - this is the molecular basis for old sayings “life is movement”.

    • @medicalpanorama
      @medicalpanorama Před rokem

      Mitochondrion synthesis is dramatically reduced in the cells of lacking ER tubes -- this is the molecular basis for male/female sexual reproduction.

    • @medicalpanorama
      @medicalpanorama Před rokem

      Do you mean ER tubes are the captain of the boat?

  • @razmiihsan8897
    @razmiihsan8897 Před rokem

    The chi part reminds me of the game Parasite Eve

  • @jaym9846
    @jaym9846 Před rokem

    Do mitochondria love chocolate?

  • @stevenpryer5880
    @stevenpryer5880 Před rokem

    MALTEASERS FRANCIQUE THEOPHALUS FRANCIQUE THEOPHALUS FRANCIQUE THEOPHALUS FRANCIQUE THEOPHALUS FRANCIQUE THEOPHALUS FRANCIQUE THEOPHALUS FRANCIQUE THEOPHALUS PLASHET WARD LONDON PLASHET WARD LONDON PLASHET WARD LONDON PLASHET WARD LONDON FRANCIQUE THEOPHALUS PLASHET WARD LONDON

  • @ElizabethMillerTX
    @ElizabethMillerTX Před rokem

    So helpful and enlightening!

  • @synatkeam4600
    @synatkeam4600 Před rokem

    Wonderful talk, Dr. thanks

  • @johncockerill7025
    @johncockerill7025 Před rokem

    marty laurence, i am 100% with you.

  • @erwinrogers9470
    @erwinrogers9470 Před rokem

    Love it 🔥

  • @johnpaulsecond4626
    @johnpaulsecond4626 Před rokem

    the genius that is the mitochondria is magnified by science but that magnification power is small by comparison to that which is intuitive, the intelligence that is cultivated when we focus on energy through meditation and contemplation; that's where the real AH HA moments are revealed. it is always inspiring to hear young geniuses who keep tapping away on the inner workings of the energy hub that is the mitochondria; keep up the great work;

  • @digipieman-1
    @digipieman-1 Před rokem

    Thank you for a highly informative video in lay public terms! 👏🏽👏🏽 It is currently July 2022, is this video still relevant for the most part? If not or, if partial, is there an updated version somewhere? 🤔

  • @tomclayton
    @tomclayton Před rokem

    Your slides are terrible! They are unnecessarily detailed and interfere with comprehension, not enhancing it. You need to make the slides much more focused and simpler. The fewer the words and symbols and legends, the better. Your verbal delivery is pretty good but the slides destroy it.

    • @JMSsssssss
      @JMSsssssss Před 8 měsíci

      I doubt he read your comment

  • @hosoiarchives4858
    @hosoiarchives4858 Před rokem

    2:24 paradigms

  • @mikepict9011
    @mikepict9011 Před rokem

    czcams.com/video/rF_yhnBOwzM/video.html

  • @mikepict9011
    @mikepict9011 Před rokem

    The disease was the poison you ate . The headache was the inflammatory reaction. It makes sense for surgeons to specialize. But diagnostics is thinking big picture , theorizing, testing

    • @binathere2574
      @binathere2574 Před rokem

      The disease is the large amounts blue light your body took in and the amount of sunlight you didn't get.

    • @mikepict9011
      @mikepict9011 Před rokem

      @@binathere2574 well no . Poisoning the mitochondria with coal pollution. Don't get me wrong I'm under IR right now . But the body can tolerate non ionizing radiation much much much better then mercury lead uranium and magnetic nanoparticles. Sorry . You can damage a cell with non ionizing radiation for sure or magnets. But the #1 killer on earth is coal pollution

  • @lovewenwin
    @lovewenwin Před rokem

    CFS me is awfully painful

  • @immortalityIMT
    @immortalityIMT Před 2 lety

    Awesome presentation. The problem is... does fixing the mutation make the disease go away?

  • @clorenger
    @clorenger Před 2 lety

    Such a wonderful talk. Thank you for sharing.

  • @jhajiya9297
    @jhajiya9297 Před 2 lety

    Please mam you can help me....? I want to do PhD in botany but I can't decide PhD topic...?

    • @genidor
      @genidor Před rokem

      Artifical Leaf. Get a PhD, help ameliorate climate change, win a Nobel Prize.

  • @cnh007
    @cnh007 Před 2 lety

    I wish all researchers had communication skills like Prof. Jung Every scientific researcher should watch this as a masterclass on how to communicate your research problem to the layman This talk was perfect - full of insights, humor and got me excited about medicinal chemistry ! So glad the youtube algorithm recommended this to me !

  • @martylawrence5532
    @martylawrence5532 Před 2 lety

    There are FIVE information codes in every cell, aside from blood cells. The five are the DNA code, the mtDNA code, the epigenome code, the 'sugar' code that lines the surface of every cell, and the lipid code making up cell membranes. All these had to work in unison. The makeup of these for life are mathematical impossibilities-by-chance. To say the ribosome sums up evolution is ludicrous. That is defined as a 10^50 or more. It's far too complex without outside intelligence to make it happen. On top of this, the Intelligent Designer is a master chemist with 65 different hormones in the human body. We are a creation.. Not an evolution.

  • @SKARTHIKSELVAN
    @SKARTHIKSELVAN Před 2 lety

    Thanks for your informative lecture.