Very in-depth lecture. Thanks.
But, I was hoping to find out more about the correlation between aging and mitochondria. I presume we have a prolonged mitochondria die off when we get past 44 years or so. It would be interesting to know more about that; what triggers the die off, why we don't make more mitochondria to replace what has disappeared. Thanks.
I was not the target audience for this, but it was fascinating nonetheless. Thank you for the simple and accessibly worded explanations!!!
Thankful, we learn a lot.💟
Great talk, I learned a lot. Thanks.
Thank you!
Thanks for sharing this information!
man, i love this video
Thanks for helping understand.
Excellent!!! Thank you!
Thanks for everything ❤️ Sir 🙏You are great person and scientist😁🙏 💗
Amazing talk! Thank you 🙏🏽
Besides red blood cells, which other cells does not have mitochondria?
i would like to learn about the effect on autism
10^100 Thanks.
Transplanting new, healthier mitochondria without mutations, then we work to reproduce them
The only thing I got to say about this I wish I had read these articles before my arteries become plugged I need a quadruple bypass now too late to run
So, death is loss of mitochondrial function?
"Close Approximation "
or " proximity "? Americans are so nonstandard in their usages, that we are left guessing at what was meant. It seems that complexity in speech is seen as a mark of education.
Our body is superbly designed, indeed. This is our duty to take a good care of our mitochondria. Thank you Dr. Peter McGuire and other scientists for bringing all the info to us on this platform, so we can be enlighten what to do to stay healthy or to battle dysfunctions or diseases. All the very best in 2024!
Mitochondria so cuuuute!