Added: 1 year ago
From: brightstorm2
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  • Great Videos!

  • I want him to be my science teacher.

  • that's right there is no time out in tiger hunt. lol

  • "that your parents are drinking" :D

  • ahahaha "they go nom nom nom and pig out on glucose and pee out a bunch of alcohol"

  • because of u cool dude i dont think im gonna fail my honnoes bio test or the final, thanks cool tiger hunting booz drinking dude!

  • I wish this guy was my biology teacher - he's awesome!

  • I don't worry about time outs. I'm always the tiger.

  • "That your parents are drinking." HAHAHAHA funny man. Trying to learn this shit just welcomes a fifth

  • awww...i thought there was a time out in tiger hunts...sucks to be me ^-^

  • plzzzz mr.tiger, time out >':

  • yeast pee=booze!!!! ;P blahhh

    

  • ynom ynom ynom :)

  • Who knew that could alcohol was a form of urine...

  • i think i may love you <3 you make it all look easy and say jokes so seriously XD

  • .....im gonna fail my test tomorrow O_ o'

  • Come to my school 

  • 4:33 Wait wah? May parents are drinking alcolhol?! Bah Bah But they said....

  • 4:33

  • Comment removed

  • 4:30 WAIT what my parents are drinking alcohol?! aaaaaaaaaah aaaaah!

  • Comment removed

  • nom nom nom nom

  • i wish u r my bio teacher:))) u made things a lot easier.....

  • hahaha please mr. tiger time out

  • "that your parents are drinking" lmao yea right :P

  • nom nom nom

  • Thank you! I have an exam and I just can't review on a boring old textbook. :)

  • This video is misinformation.

    Anaerobic respiration is not fermentation. Anaerobic respiration uses an electron transports system to create a proton gradient across a membrane, which then powers ATP production using ATP synthase.  It is mostly the same as aerobic respiration except that the final electron acceptor for the electron transport system is not oxygen.

  • @DNAunion Whoa whoa whoa whoa you're getting your facts confused. I appreciate that you have a Bachelors in Science majored in Biology, but you just described the electron transport system - which NEEDS oxygen. Fermentation is a form of anaerobic respiration. Please check your references.

  • @Dnguyen1319

    No, an electron transport system does not REQUIRE oxygen to be the terminal electron acceptor -- ours and many others do, but there are plenty that don't. Try looking up nitrate respiration; it uses an electron transport system, but nitrate - not oxygen - is the terminal electron acceptor. Nitrate respiration is a form of anaerobic respiration .... fermentation is not.

  • @Dnguyen1319

    "Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 is a Gram-negative, nonfermentative rod with a complex electron transport system which facilitates its ability to use a variety of terminal electron acceptors, including fumarate, for anaerobic respiration. "

    J Basic Microbiol. 2003;43(4):312-27, Identification of the gene encoding the sole physiological fumarate reductase in Shewanella oneidensis MR-1, Maier TM, Myers JM, Myers CR.

  • @Dnguyen1319

    1 of 2

    From

    ht tp:/ /mansfield. osu. e du/~sabedon/biol1100.h tm

    "a. Cellular respiration is a complex mechanism whereby large numbers of ATPs are produced via the utilization of an inorganic final electron acceptor and an electron transport chain.

    b.Aerobic and anaerobic: "

  • @Dnguyen1319

    2 of 2

    "i. Cellular respiration comes in two general varieties distinguished by the nature of their inorganic final electron acceptor: oxygen versus everything else.

    ii. These two forms of cellular respiration are dubbed aerobic and anaerobic respiration (or cellular respiration), respectively""

  • @Dnguyen1319

    "Respiration in some procaryotes is possible using electron acceptors other than oxygen (O2). This type of respiration in the absence of oxygen is referred to as anaerobic respiration. Although anaerobic respiration is more complicated than the foregoing statement, in its simplest form it represents the substitution or use of some compound other than O2 as a final electron acceptor in the electron transport chain."

    Source in next post

  • @Dnguyen1319

    Source for last post:

    ww w.textbookofbacteriology.n et/metabolism_4.ht ml

  • @Dnguyen1319

    "In anaerobic respiration, electron transfer is to a molecule other than oxygen or to an ionic species, again coupled to generation of an electrochemical gradient. Whatever the electron acceptor, respiration provides the ability to conserve energy in the form of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) or perform energy-demanding processes (such as solute transport or motility) through generation of a transmembrane proton motive force (Δp) (see reference 44)."

    source in next post

  • @Dnguyen1319

    Source for last post: ww w. ncbi. nlm. nih. g ov/books/NBK2411/

  • NOM NOM NOM

  • That NADH is useless. It can't be used for anything.

  • Is glucose broken by 1 phosphate put on either side? Or do both sides get a phosphate making it easier to break? And is the phosphate addition what makes the glucose break or is there more to it?

  • There's no timesies in tiger hunts.

  • @studiomercurykc lol. that was the best part

  • irate gamer copied avgn

    

  • very nice video!!!!

  • OMNOMNOM

    I lol'd

  • N00B

  • N00B

  • very helpful :)

  • thx

  • Thank you so much for this! This really helped in my class. My teacher tried to explain this to me but it never made sense. You made this a lot easier to learn!

  • Nom Nom Glucose

  • Nerd?

    Rich Nerd?

    Who here wants to be a a rich nerd like this guy? ...raise your hand.

  • this guy rocks! It helped even more because he reminds me of Proffesor Wayne Zilinkski from honey i shrunk the kids haha

  • lmao alcoholic parents

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