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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 Organization and Expression of Lymphocyte Receptor Genes (Immunology part 6)
Cellular and Molecular Biology for Research
1 hour 30 minutes 17 seconds
2 months ago
The Organization and Expression of Lymphocyte Receptor Genes (Immunology part 6)

Since the early twentieth century, when it was first recognized that antibody molecules could specifically identify and bind to a vast array of antigens, immunologists have sought to understand how a limited amount of genetic information could encode such a broad range of specific receptor molecules in lymphocytes of the adaptive immune response. It is now known that B- and T-cell receptor molecules are encoded by families of short gene segments, which are uniquely recombined in different lymphocytes to create the receptor repertoire of the adaptive immune system.


Receptors in T and B cells consist of two distinct chains that can be recombined in various ways. Additionally, when two receptor gene segments join, further diversity arises through the nontemplated addition of varying numbers of nucleotides at the junctions between segments. These highly variable sequences at the gene segment junctions form the regions on antigen receptors that interact with antigens, known as the complementarity-determining regions. Due to the random addition and deletion of nucleotides at these junctions, many recombined receptor genes fail to encode functional proteins, resulting in the destruction of nascent B and T cells. Thus, the remarkable receptor diversity characteristic of the adaptive immune system demands significant energy expenditure at the cellular level.


The timing of these recombination events is precisely regulated during the development of T and B cells. While the overall process of receptor gene generation is similar in both cell types, subtle variations in the details adapt the receptors to the specific functions of each cell type.

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).