Susan Wessler (UC Riverside) Part 1: Introduction to transposable elements
https://www.ibiology.org/genetics-and... In Part 1, Wessler introduces transposable elements (TEs); small movable pieces of DNA that can insert throughout the genome. She describes their discovery in maize by Barbara McClintock in the 1940's and their impact on the current study of genetics. Wessler goes on to provide more details about TEs and transposase, the enzyme that facilitates insertion of TEs into the target DNA. Amazingly, as much as 50% of a mammalian genome and much more of a plant genome can be made of TEs. In Part 2 of her talk, Wessler discusses work from her lab analyzing the impact of TEs on gene and genome evolution. By looking for and finding a TE currently undergoing rapid amplification, Wessler and her colleagues have been able to assess how a type of TE called a MITE can rapidly increase its copy number without killing its host, rice.

Susan Wessler (UC Riverside) Part 2: How transposable elements amplify throughout genomes

Barbara McClintock Tribute Film

Barbara McClintock Explained: The Hidden Truth Behind the Corn Experiment & Nobel Prize Speech

David Bartel (Whitehead Institute/MIT/HHMI) Part 1: MicroRNAs: Introduction to MicroRNAs

Bacterial Genetics

Evolutionary Tree of Life (Full Series)

The Crystal That Could Destroy All Medicine

Howard Chang (Stanford, HHMI) 1: Epigenomic Technologies

The #1 Mistake that You Are Making with Supplements

“Transposable elements and epigenome evolution” with Ting Wang, PhD

Next Generation Sequencing 1: Overview - Eric Chow (UCSF)

Lee Kass - "Barbara McClintock at Cornell university: 1919-1939 & Beyond"

Melissa Moore (U. Mass/HHMI) Part 1: Split Genes and RNA Splicing

Why Your Vote Doesn't Count

Jennifer Doudna (UC Berkeley / HHMI): Genome Engineering with CRISPR-Cas9

Unlearn Negative Thoughts & Behaviors Patterns | Dr. Alok Kanojia (Healthy Gamer)

C. David Allis (Rockefeller U.) 2: Epigenetics in Development and Disease

piggyBac Transposons to Cut and Paste DNA

Stephen P. Bell (MIT / HHMI) 1a: Chromosomal DNA Replication: The DNA Replication Fork

