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Cellular and Molecular Biology for Research
Ahmadreza Gharaeian
25 episodes
1 day ago
Cellular and Molecular Biology for Research is the podcast where complex textbooks stop gathering dust and start making sense. Each episode breaks down the dense chapters of cellular and molecular biology—DNA, signaling pathways, protein folding, experimental techniques—into clear explanations for students, early-career researchers, or anyone who wants to actually understand the science instead of just memorizing it. Think of it as your study buddy who reads the heavy stuff, translates the jargon, and hands you the key concepts (with a little less pain and a lot more clarity).
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Medicine
Health & Fitness
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All content for Cellular and Molecular Biology for Research is the property of Ahmadreza Gharaeian and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Cellular and Molecular Biology for Research is the podcast where complex textbooks stop gathering dust and start making sense. Each episode breaks down the dense chapters of cellular and molecular biology—DNA, signaling pathways, protein folding, experimental techniques—into clear explanations for students, early-career researchers, or anyone who wants to actually understand the science instead of just memorizing it. Think of it as your study buddy who reads the heavy stuff, translates the jargon, and hands you the key concepts (with a little less pain and a lot more clarity).
Show more...
Medicine
Health & Fitness
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The Complement System (Immunology part 5)
Cellular and Molecular Biology for Research
1 hour 17 minutes 42 seconds
2 months ago
The Complement System (Immunology part 5)

The complement system is a collection of serum proteins, many of which circulate in inactive forms and require cleavage or conformational changes for activation. These proteins include initiator molecules, enzymatic mediators, membrane-binding components (opsonins), inflammatory mediators, membrane attack proteins, complement receptor proteins, and regulatory components. Although complement protein genes predate those encoding adaptive immune system receptors, complement proteins play roles in both innate and adaptive immunity. Key effector functions are performed by proteins such as C1q and C3b, which act as opsonins in phagocytosis by coating microbial surfaces and facilitating recognition by complement-specific receptors on macrophages. Other complement proteins act as anaphylatoxins, promoting increased blood flow and capillary permeability at inflammatory sites. Additionally, the membrane attack complex, formed by certain complement proteins, creates pores in microbial membranes or infected host cells, causing lysis and death. Due to its destructive potential, a robust regulatory system co-evolved with complement proteins to target microbial threats while minimizing host cell damage. The critical role of the complement system in host defense is evident in the variety of microbial strategies developed to evade it, including mimicking or co-opting host regulatory proteins, destroying complement components, or disrupting their interactions with one another or with antibodies. As new pathogens emerge, novel evasion mechanisms continue to develop.

Cellular and Molecular Biology for Research
Cellular and Molecular Biology for Research is the podcast where complex textbooks stop gathering dust and start making sense. Each episode breaks down the dense chapters of cellular and molecular biology—DNA, signaling pathways, protein folding, experimental techniques—into clear explanations for students, early-career researchers, or anyone who wants to actually understand the science instead of just memorizing it. Think of it as your study buddy who reads the heavy stuff, translates the jargon, and hands you the key concepts (with a little less pain and a lot more clarity).