Introduction to SMRT Sequencing

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  • čas přidán 4. 12. 2011
  • A brief animated introduction to Pacific Biosciences' Single Molecule, Real-Time (SMRT) Sequencing, including the SMRT Cell and zero mode waveguide (ZMW).
    Note: NO AUDIO in this animation. Explanatory text is included.
    Check out our latest video on SMRT Sequencing: • Introduction to PacBio...
    Learn more about PacBio at pacb.com/
    Legal & Trademarks: Visit www.pacb.com/legal-and-tradem...
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 20

  • @JermelTaylor
    @JermelTaylor Před 10 lety +40

    Sound quality is GREAT!

  • @yilongzhang3499
    @yilongzhang3499 Před rokem +3

    Imagine you are an international student paying 5,000 dollars for this course to learn in university and they are sent to off to watch an advertisement video from a tech company, a silent comedy film, no less.

    • @Voschdasirup
      @Voschdasirup Před 2 měsíci

      while the fees you mention are quite high for where I'm from, I see their point in sensing you to this video. it's a fast way to grasp a concept you will only use as a tool later on and don't need to understand from the ground up.
      ..unless u study engineering and are supposed to build such machine in which case these 2 minutes wouldn't cut it xD
      but for molecBio it is enough
      ps: i was sent here too

  • @robertlogan9733
    @robertlogan9733 Před 3 lety

    10^-21 liters is a single zeptoliter, not 20 zeptoliters.

  • @1stserviceNet-2ndBounces
    @1stserviceNet-2ndBounces Před 6 lety +8

    Jonger Chua: the way I understand it is that the size of the chamber is such that the illuminating light pulse only passes far enough into the wave guide to excite the markers which then emit their frequency out the guide at the top to the detector. If the illuminating pulse were to continue through the waveguide the detector would essentially be "blinded". This is how they achieve the high signal to noise needed for accurate recording.

  • @Nereus00
    @Nereus00 Před 6 lety +3

    the explanation of the wavelight at the beginning is just to tell that the light penetrates very shortly in the guide, just enough to eccitate the released fluorophore in order to be detected, since it needs to be eccitated by uv light to be detected, otherwise you could see all possible background light given by sopntaneous reaction or whatever

  • @pablohoney
    @pablohoney Před 9 lety

    Nice video. Clear explanations and animations.

  • @trucmai729
    @trucmai729 Před 6 lety

    Could you help me explain what happen at the other end? Can you somehow fix two polymerase at the bottom? Do both forward and reverse synthesis happen at the same time? Thanks.

  • @raphaeltiziani7476
    @raphaeltiziani7476 Před 8 lety +4

    Great Video. Im studying biotechnology and this helped me a lot in genomes.

  • @Polarcupcheck
    @Polarcupcheck Před 10 lety

    Amazing.

  • @raphaeltiziani7476
    @raphaeltiziani7476 Před 8 lety

    Great Video. Im studying biotechnology and this helped me a lot in genomes.

  • @jongerchua366
    @jongerchua366 Před 8 lety +3

    I don't really understand 0:23. mind explaining?

  • @marwanmohamed6575
    @marwanmohamed6575 Před 5 lety

    any one understand how excaly hesy choose or isolate a single dna fragment or template of desire ?

    • @marwanmohamed6575
      @marwanmohamed6575 Před 5 lety

      and how will they put a genome for example or the excome by which each fragment will be in 1 zmw

  • @matthewludivico1714
    @matthewludivico1714 Před 5 lety +1

    No audio?