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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 Major Histocompatibility Complex and Antigen Presentation (Immunology Part 7)
Cellular and Molecular Biology for Research
1 hour 2 minutes 50 seconds
2 months ago
The Major Histocompatibility Complex and Antigen Presentation (Immunology Part 7)

If antigen-presenting cells serve as the bridge between innate and adaptive immunity, then MHC molecules act as the essential tools enabling this connection. These molecules hold antigenic fragments and present them to T-cell receptors, activating the corresponding T cell and initiating the adaptive immune response. As transmembrane proteins, MHC molecules are expressed on the surface of cells and are widely distributed throughout the body. They exhibit significant diversity at both individual and population levels due to evolutionary pressures from pathogens, which have driven gene duplication, polymorphism, and codominant expression patterns. For antigens to associate with MHC molecules, they must first be processed into smaller fragments and transported to cellular locations where they can bind and stabilize the MHC structure before being presented on the cell surface. The shape and chemical properties of the MHC antigen-binding groove, determined by the inherited alleles at this locus, dictate the types of antigenic fragments that can be presented to T cells. This, in turn, determines which portions of infectious agents are recognized and which naïve T cells are activated. Since most B cells, which do not require MHC involvement for antigen recognition, depend on T-cell assistance for full activation, MHC-mediated antigen presentation becomes central to the adaptive immune response. Consequently, diversity in the MHC gene locus benefits individual hosts and enhances species survival by maintaining a diverse MHC gene pool within the population.

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).