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00:00 | The phallic phase. All right. this is the pre this is the |
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00:07 | thing. All right. And so gonna have a nervous system response |
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00:11 | All right. Now you're walking across , you smell that food truck. |
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00:17 | around lunch time. What, what happens? I mean, do |
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00:22 | mouth start watering a little bit? , you smell that food and it's |
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00:26 | like, oh man, I'm so if I started talking about food right |
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00:29 | . Is anyone getting a little Yeah, you, you can feel |
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00:33 | water in your mouth. You can even feel that growl in the stomach |
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00:36 | like, all right, that aal . So the thought of food, |
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00:44 | smell of food, the sight of , even the taste just like, |
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00:49 | , would you like a little You know, that's just danger, |
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00:52 | ? You know, all that is to initiate this process and here |
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00:56 | what we're doing in terms of the is hypothalamus through them is acting um |
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01:01 | to the, from the, what doing is you're sending a signal down |
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01:06 | the biggest nerve. And what you're is you're making the stomach start contracting |
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01:11 | . Now, why are you doing ? Right. There's no food there |
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01:14 | . But what you're trying to do you're saying in preparation for the |
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01:16 | I'm ready to start breaking it down that we can get the nutrients into |
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01:19 | body. Right. And so you're for that incoming meal in the process |
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01:25 | those contractions. The other thing, going to start secreting stuff, |
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01:29 | You're gonna see an up regulation of hydrochloric acid. You're going to see |
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01:33 | starting to be released, right? so we're looking for that material to |
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01:38 | the process of digestion. So when plate is put in front of |
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01:42 | that's what's going on in anticipation of meal, I'm ready to start |
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01:47 | I'm not gonna wait till actually shows . I'm gonna start the process and |
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01:51 | most familiar with it with that growl the stomach. It was like, |
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01:58 | like I'm ready for the food. right, the next phase is while |
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02:03 | eating food, this is the gastric . So there's a nervous response and |
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02:07 | an endocrine response here. Remember? as the stomach is filling up, |
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02:11 | receptors are, are detecting that degree stretch. And what they're doing is |
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02:16 | saying we are filling up if I'm up, that means there are things |
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02:18 | need to be digested. So I'm to start sending signals to these cells |
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02:24 | to my system to let them know we have food that's responsible for |
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02:29 | The chemo receptors that are located in stomach are going to detect the changes |
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02:34 | the presence of the proteins. So proteins that are going to be |
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02:37 | they're going, oh look, they're . Let's start releasing hydrochloric acid. |
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02:41 | , let's start releasing pepsinogen. So can start breaking this stuff down. |
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02:45 | then again, signals are relayed up the medulla from the medulla. They |
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02:48 | down through the vagus nerve. The nerve reinforces through the endocrine system. |
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02:52 | we talk about G cells. G are responsible for releasing a signal out |
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02:57 | the stomach to the other cells. so that's another, that's the endocrine |
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03:02 | . All right. So G cells being stimulated by the vagus nerve. |
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03:07 | G cells are, are also sending to release that pepsinogen and to release |
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03:13 | hydrochloric acid from the chief cell and parietal cell make sure you get the |
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03:17 | one. Chief cells for pepsinogen parietal , hydrochloric acid. So when food |
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03:24 | present, I'm up regulating the production these chemicals for digestion, right? |
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03:31 | it's pretty straightforward, it's just the of regulation gets complex. But guess |
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03:37 | have I described the mechanism of No. All right, just understand |
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03:43 | nerves. So we're gonna be dealing parasympathetic and understand endocrine through gastrin. |
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03:50 | right, then we have the intestinal . So this is on the other |
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03:55 | , this is after the meal. you've just eaten a big giant juicy |
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03:59 | with the fries and the chili cheese the two giant shakes and you're sloshing |
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04:05 | the house because you can barely And that food is slowly moving into |
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04:10 | intestine. What do we say when gets ground down and becomes liquid |
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04:14 | That's when it's going to move into intestine. And what it's gonna do |
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04:18 | it's going to oppose the other Right? Because it's in control. |
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04:22 | the one that's saying I want stuff my inbox, but I want to |
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04:26 | the rate at which my inbox gets . So don't send me stuff until |
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04:31 | ready for it. All right. with regard to the nervous system, |
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04:35 | trying to prevent, over distinction, doesn't want to damage itself. It |
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04:38 | to deal with what you're, what sending it. All right. The |
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04:42 | kind serves as a signal as well block the module from activating through the |
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04:49 | , right? So there's chemo receptors are located there. And then in |
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04:53 | of the, the those the endocrine , we mentioned the two big chemicals |
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04:59 | , right? And we mentioned sein to release bicarbonate, to reduce the |
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05:07 | , to create an environment that favors and cholecystokinin to start releasing those enzymes |
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05:14 | are responsible for digestion. OK? those are the three phases. So |
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05:21 | , before I eat, during during what I eat, I'm, |
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05:24 | , I'm adding in and then after eat, I'm regulating how much is |
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05:29 | metered in. Does that make sense far? Ok. So that kind |
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05:36 | catches us up from, from Tuesday. Gotta remember what day it |
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05:41 | . It's hard. And so what want to do is I want to |
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05:44 | that gear and I want to move the biochemistry. All right. And |
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05:48 | , we're not when you hear the biochemistry, don't think I'm going to |
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05:51 | dealing with a lot of chemistry I want you to understand what we're |
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05:55 | is we're just asking the question is I'm putting Cheetos in my mouth, |
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05:58 | am I getting out of it? many guys are nutrition, nutrition majors |
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06:03 | do nutrition? Great. I'm gonna every single one of you. All |
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06:07 | . And I'm not doing it on . I'm just, I, I |
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06:09 | saying this because it's true for your . It's less true for my age |
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06:13 | that basically you can eat anything you because your body knows how to deal |
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06:17 | it. When you get my your metabolism goes to crap. And |
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06:20 | you're not able to live a life , on stale pizza. And Cheetos |
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06:25 | , I miss being your age and was just awesome bags of Cheetos. |
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06:29 | , that's what I lived on. right. Now, if these molecules |
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06:35 | not make sense to you, I you to go back and look at |
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06:39 | first or second chapter in the That's not part of this class, |
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06:44 | it is part of a MP one talks about the biomolecules. Right. |
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06:49 | , if you get lost, I don't know what a carbohydrate |
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06:51 | just go and just briefly skim through if you can always go to Wikipedia |
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06:55 | , but you never know what you're to get. Right. At least |
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06:58 | the textbook it's going to be to you into this. All right. |
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07:03 | again, I'm not going to try go too far, but basically the |
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07:07 | are the sugars that we consume. right. Uh We primarily get these |
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07:13 | from and I'm just gonna bring it carbs. We get them primarily from |
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07:17 | and it's not true for everything. mean, we have things like milk |
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07:20 | which is lactose. Um when you meat, you are getting sugar because |
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07:27 | stores up sugar in the form of . You just don't have a lot |
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07:30 | it. So you actually get carbs you're consuming just meat, you |
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07:35 | it's much, much lower right Typically what you're consuming are gonna be |
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07:42 | monosaccharide and disaccharide which consist of these . So you guys like fruit. |
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07:48 | . Great. You guys love your . Mm Sugar good, right. |
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07:53 | right. Some of you are like , well, um I don't like |
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07:56 | cane. I get my sugar from beets. That's, it always carries |
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08:01 | beet flavor with it. Um Honey . This is where we probably |
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08:06 | primarily getting our monosaccharide and disaccharide. when we think of the more complex |
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08:11 | , the polysaccharides, these are coming the grains that you eat. These |
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08:16 | from the vegetables that you eat. of them are indigestible. We don't |
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08:20 | the right enzymes to break them And so they remain in our body |
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08:24 | fiber or in our digestive system as and it provides bulk for the stools |
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08:29 | it provides food and materials for the that live in our digestive system. |
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08:34 | so when you're having a hard time to the bathroom, what's the thing |
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08:37 | they tell you to do? Eat fiber? Right? Well, you |
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08:41 | go buy Metamucil, which is fiber or you can sit there and munch |
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08:46 | either way works. Ok. So soluble polysaccharides are like things like |
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08:54 | If you've heard the word pectin, is something that's found in fruits. |
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08:57 | actually used sometimes as a preservative. insoluble ones is cellulose. I like |
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09:02 | think of the, the best example cellulose is celery, right? You |
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09:08 | use more energy eating celery than you out of the celery, right? |
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09:13 | basically, it's just, it's basically in water is what it is. |
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09:19 | right. So this is the thing where you get the kind of the |
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09:23 | from is either the pin or the other things like cellulose. Now, |
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09:29 | we do is we look at and can kind of see because we've already |
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09:32 | about it that we organize sugars based their size. All right. So |
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09:36 | look at how many repeating units do have? So, a monosaccharide is |
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09:40 | simple sugar, that's a single And so the ones that we're most |
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09:45 | in, because this is what our consumes for fuel is glucose, galactose |
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09:50 | fructose. They're all isomers of each . And if you don't know what |
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09:53 | isomer is, that's OK. All , we're not, I'm not asking |
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09:57 | question, but you can take galactose you can convert it into glucose. |
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10:01 | can take fructose and clerk and convert into glucose. Our body for the |
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10:05 | part uses glucose as the fuel for brain fructose. Interestingly is used by |
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10:12 | cell in the body for its fuel . And that's actually sperm. It's |
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10:17 | weird why I don't know why it's that path, but it, it |
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10:22 | . All right. The disa right two of these subunits in different |
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10:28 | So the three common ones that you're familiar with are sucrose. That's the |
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10:32 | sugar that you can get from beets from cane. Um maltose which comes |
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10:37 | grains and then you have lactose which from milk. All right. This |
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10:43 | one I like to live by right . That's the good one. Mm |
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10:50 | you. All right. And then , starch, that's your polysaccharide |
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10:54 | Like I said, that's indigestible All . So what we do is we're |
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10:59 | take these big molecules, these we're gonna break them down to |
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11:03 | We're gonna take the diss, we're break it down the monosaccharide and it's |
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11:07 | monosaccharide that we're able to absorb. the process of carbohydrate digestion is to |
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11:13 | it down to one of those three three different uh sugars. And so |
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11:18 | you look at this, you're gonna , oh my goodness. There's so |
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11:21 | information up there. Don't worry about the steps. That's not the important |
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11:25 | . The important part is understanding where taking place and what you're getting out |
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11:28 | it. So in the mouth, have one enzyme, it's called |
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11:33 | Amylase. Amylase is a enzyme that down polysaccharides. So when you take |
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11:39 | uh French fry and you shove it your mouth, you're beginning the process |
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11:44 | breaking down the starch of the fry smaller units, probably smaller polysaccharides. |
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11:52 | then ultimately down into disaccharide. And when that thing gets down to the |
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11:56 | , you end the process of digestion sugar for a little bit. And |
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12:01 | when that material moves to the that's when you're going to continue breaking |
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12:05 | down with the pancreatic enzymes. one of them is pancreatic amylase, |
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12:11 | is going to continue breaking it down you finally get down to that |
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12:15 | And then in the brush border, where you have enzymes that are disaccharide |
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12:22 | aces. All right. So you a, a disaccharide ace that breaks |
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12:27 | galactose. You have a disaccharide ace breaks down glucose. You have a |
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12:30 | or two glucose or. So you sucre, you have um uh m |
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12:37 | have lactase. All right. I'm not gonna ask you to raise |
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12:41 | hand. But if you know someone are lactose intolerant, what are you |
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12:47 | ? What do you have? That's fun lactase, right? And that's |
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12:51 | the brush border. And so you're able to break that stuff down the |
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12:55 | down. All right. And so why you have this kind of little |
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13:00 | here. So galactose and fructose are are all three of these are going |
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13:06 | be carried over, they each have own little carriers. And that's what |
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13:09 | little picture is showing you is look, I'm starting off with these |
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13:12 | giant molecules and get down to these sugars and then those smaller sugars finally |
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13:16 | different combinations with different enzymes which you need to know, you know, |
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13:20 | down into this brush border and down , that's where I have these enzymes |
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13:24 | start breaking down the disaccharide and trisaccharide their individual components. And then I |
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13:29 | transport them across the membrane of those of the, of the small intestine |
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13:35 | I'm absorbing them and now I can them as fuel and building blocks. |
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13:40 | so once I transport it to the because remember those portal system moves all |
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13:44 | material from the uh from the digestive to the, to the liver. |
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13:48 | the liver says, oh, we don't need galactose. Let's go ahead |
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13:51 | convert that into something we can Oh, we really don't need |
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13:54 | Let's convert that into something we can . And so you convert them into |
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13:59 | and then it's like, well, don't want to use all the sugar |
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14:02 | the same time. So let's store up. And so one of the |
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14:05 | that it will do, the liver store up sugar in the form of |
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14:10 | and muscles will take up glucose when delivered to them and it will store |
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14:14 | up as glycogen. And then some the glucose is gonna be broken down |
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14:18 | we'll see a little bit later and it's rebuilt in the form of fats |
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14:22 | then the fats transported to where it to be stored up. Ok. |
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14:28 | the gist of it here is that come in many different forms. And |
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14:34 | we do is from the mouth and the small intestines, we break down |
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14:38 | big things and turn them into small , the small absorbable subunits, the |
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14:46 | and it's those that are transportable via sort of transport mechanism. Now, |
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14:52 | mentioned already, cellulose, cellulose is indigestible. We don't have the |
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14:56 | So you can see here, we have places like we'll have shapes that |
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15:02 | we, we can't get into that to break it apart. And that's |
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15:05 | we say it's indigestible. So we have the proper enzymes. Carbohydrates. |
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15:13 | . Yeah. All right. Right now, primarily we get proteins |
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15:20 | animal products, but we also can them from uh vegetables and from legumes |
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15:26 | other things. Um, basically, you're dealing with amino acid, you |
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15:31 | get all of your amino acids from products because they carry all 20 amino |
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15:38 | that we use. But when you a vegetarian, you're gonna have to |
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15:41 | least balance your diets out between the and legumes and the vegetables because each |
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15:47 | of those are missing what we would essential amino acids. So you have |
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15:51 | balance between those two. Otherwise you deficient in an amino acid which can |
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15:56 | harmful in trying to uh to produce own uh proteins. Now, what |
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16:02 | do is we try to balance our . All right. And so nitrogen |
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16:06 | simply is that equilibrium between what we consuming. So what's coming in through |
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16:11 | diet and then what you are losing urine and feces? All right. |
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16:16 | we, we, we're ignoring what actually using to build stuff with, |
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16:21 | . So if you have a positive balance, that means you're absorbing more |
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16:25 | than you're actually excreting and the negative would be you're excreting more than you're |
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16:30 | . Now, what is a Remember? It's a polymer of amino |
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16:33 | , it's just chains and chains of acids. And so, uh when |
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16:37 | digesting a protein, what you're doing you're releasing those 20 different amino acids |
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16:43 | then your body is going to use . So, in order to digest |
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16:46 | protein, which can be many, , many hundreds of amino acid, |
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16:51 | have many different types of enzymes that responsible for breaking these things down. |
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16:57 | , what an enzyme does is it at the um the immune bond between |
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17:02 | the peptide bond between the two amino . Each enzyme recognizes specific types of |
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17:10 | . It might be between like for , Trippin, which is one of |
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17:14 | recognizes wherever there's a lucine, it up to the lucine and then it |
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17:19 | the peptide bond between a lucine and one that precedes it. So that |
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17:23 | be an example, right? But have some enzymes that recognize and start |
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17:29 | down amino acids from one end. they work from the nitrogenous or |
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17:33 | the inside. We have some that from the carboxy side. And then |
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17:37 | have some that can recognize inside the , which are those intro peas that |
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17:41 | mentioned on Tuesday. All right. they can act in very different |
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17:47 | So you end up with different size . So if you take a big |
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17:51 | and you're chopping it in different you end up with things that could |
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17:53 | like 10 amino acid along, you get one amino acid and so on |
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17:57 | so forth. Now, these enzymes released in their inactive form and I |
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18:05 | this makes sense to you. Why I want to release them inactively? |
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18:08 | do I not want them active inside cell that makes them? What do |
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18:13 | think? What are you made up ? I was waiting for someone to |
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18:20 | meat since we've talked about that All right, if you're made of |
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18:26 | , right? Your cells are parts meat. What makes up meat |
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18:35 | So if you have active enzymes that , does break down proteins, do |
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18:39 | distinguish between human proteins and any other ? No, they just, they |
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18:44 | for protein. These are enzymes that recognize sequences, right? Your body |
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18:51 | know the difference between um an amino that came from a fish and an |
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18:56 | acid that comes from a dog, ? Or from a human. All |
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19:01 | cares for is the amino acid, ? And so if you had are |
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19:07 | enzymes that are active and you keep in the cells that are full of |
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19:11 | , what are they gonna do? going to destroy the cell. So |
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19:16 | of these pepto doses are stored up their inactive form and then they're released |
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19:21 | their inactive form and then the environment for them to become activated. |
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19:34 | There it is prevent the enzymes from cells or the proteins inside the |
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19:39 | All right. So once again, think about where we're doing this digestion |
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19:44 | the mouth. We have no peptid . All right. So there is |
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19:48 | protein digestion in the mouth when you're on that massive cheeseburger and sucking on |
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19:53 | that, those that chili on top the fries that is just basically being |
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19:59 | down mechanically. Right? So, mechanical digestion to go down the stomach |
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20:03 | the stomach. That's where we begin down proteins, right? So we're |
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20:08 | it both mechanically and this is the of the Pepsin in the stomach, |
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20:12 | breaks those things down into smaller but it's not particularly efficient because you're |
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20:18 | going to be guaranteed to get single acids. And so when that kind |
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20:23 | into the small intestine, the pancreas responsible for secreting about 20 different types |
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20:29 | enzymes that are responsible for protein These are the zymogen, right, |
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20:35 | called the zymogen and what they these lytic enzymes here are three of |
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20:41 | . All right. These are the most common Trippin. So it's released |
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20:45 | its inactive form, becomes its active . Chimo Trippin agen which becomes Chimo |
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20:50 | . And I love this proc carbo . So when you see that pro |
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20:53 | the front that recognizes it as being um in its inactive form, and |
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20:58 | just tells you where it's coming Carboxy Pepsid tells you it's chewing up |
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21:02 | the back end. These are just of, of the, many of |
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21:07 | . Like I said, it's not three, there's 20 of these things |
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21:10 | what they do as they break these down into smaller and smaller bits. |
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21:15 | this is what it's trying to show over here, here's a bunch of |
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21:18 | . We're getting smaller peptides and maybe individual amino acids. And then what |
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21:23 | going to do is we're going to down to these brush border enzymes. |
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21:26 | here we can break down large ones smaller ones and they are actually transporters |
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21:31 | deal with, say like tripeptide and , but we really want just the |
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21:36 | acids. And so we have transporters the individual amino acids. And so |
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21:40 | we're doing is we're moving large proteins breaking them down into the small |
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21:47 | we can get our hands on and we have the transporters that move them |
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21:51 | the Luminal cells and from the Luminal , we send them off where they |
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21:55 | be used in your body for multiple , primarily as building blocks, |
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22:00 | But not just building blocks. We amino acids as a food source, |
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22:05 | fuel as well. All right. other words, we can go through |
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22:10 | process called gluconeogenesis where we convert it glucose, taking amino acid, break |
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22:19 | apart and put it back together. then now it's glucose, which can |
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22:23 | used by the brain for fuel. an argument with my son, yesterday |
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22:33 | have an argument every day but in had to do with, uh, |
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22:38 | and food and he was angry because were gonna go have tacos on Taco |
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22:44 | . So I guess it wasn't It was Tuesday and he was fats |
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22:47 | bad for you. It's like, , we're designed to consume fats. |
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22:50 | thing, we're not supposed to eat carbs. I mean, we love |
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22:55 | , our bodies basically, when they carbs, it sends out big giant |
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22:58 | in our brain to say, eat of these. All right, because |
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23:02 | an easy fuel source for the but for the rest of your |
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23:05 | it's not a particularly good thing. right, fat and proteins are what |
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23:09 | designed to consume. And on occasion carbs, you can tell that because |
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23:14 | you look at our teeth, we , we have slicers and rippers. |
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23:19 | have a couple of mashers in the . All right. If you look |
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23:23 | animal eaters or animal eaters, you , carnivores, what do they have |
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23:28 | slicers and cutters if you look at um uh I wanna say vegetarians, |
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23:34 | it's not vegetarians. It's um Thank you. See, this is |
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23:38 | happens. It's so early in the . Not enough caffeine. If you |
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23:41 | at herbivores, what do they primarily ? They primarily have grinders. They |
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23:45 | a couple of slicers in the but mostly it's grinders. All |
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23:49 | So we are omnivores so we do everything but, you know, fruits |
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23:55 | show up until summertime. And I , we, we, as 20th |
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24:00 | humans have conquered nature. In that , we can make fruits anytime, |
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24:04 | all the time and we can ship across the world if we need |
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24:08 | Which is where your strawberries come from the winter time. Right? But |
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24:14 | right here is what we're designed to . It's fats, that's why fats |
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24:19 | so good. It's when you get Marbly steak, it's like when you |
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24:23 | butter on popcorn. Oh, yeah. Your, because your brain |
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24:26 | it's like, oh, this is that your body wants. All |
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24:30 | Now, most of our dietary fats in the form of triglycerides. All |
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24:33 | . There's saturated fats which come from products. There's unsaturated fats. They |
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24:38 | get them on your seeds and through and so and so forth. But |
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24:42 | other fat is cholesterol. You are to consume cholesterol, you know. |
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24:46 | you get that from like egg meats, shellfish, yada, |
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24:49 | uh milk products, for example, most of it's produced by your |
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24:54 | So you actually make most of your . Uh If you've heard of the |
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24:58 | three S, those fatty acids, don't make those, you have |
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25:02 | uh get them. Um, and , the amount of Omega three S |
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25:07 | need is probably not as high as thought they were. If you go |
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25:09 | look at some of those studies, were very localized in terms of the |
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25:13 | they were looking at. So I the very first study where they got |
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25:17 | , like, everyone must have it was like the Inuit population, |
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25:20 | is um basically the uh North I don't know if it's North |
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25:27 | but basically, it's an indigenous population the top of the world that basically |
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25:32 | entire diet for the last, I don't know, 50 or so |
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25:36 | has been whales and, and So lots and lots of fat in |
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25:40 | diet. So they, they have evolved to consume a lot of stuff |
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25:45 | the um the omega three s but threes are good for us just probably |
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25:50 | as good as what we initially So how do we break this stuff |
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25:55 | ? Well, remember if you took P1, we talk about lipids, |
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25:58 | are multiple types of lipids out right? There are basically four classes |
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26:03 | lipids. And when you talk about the triglycerides, the differences between each |
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26:07 | the lipids is in that fatty acid and how long it is? All |
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26:11 | . And so there are all sorts different types of lipids that we come |
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26:15 | . So if they have all this structure, you're going to need to |
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26:18 | able to digest them in such a that you can get what you need |
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26:22 | of them. Now, these are water soluble, primarily triglycerides and cholesterol |
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26:26 | what we're interested in. You don't to break down, uh, |
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26:30 | It will, um, because it's fat, when it sees a plasm |
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26:33 | , it just wants to go running it. But fatty acids, on |
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26:37 | other hand, they're not free floating the time. Remember, fats, |
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26:42 | other fats, they don't like So, what they do is they |
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26:45 | together and they create fat bubbles in digestive system, right? Just, |
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26:51 | know, that's, that's kind of they just behave. And so |
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26:55 | we've come up with this mechanism to them to be small again, instead |
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26:59 | big bubbles, we want to create bubbles. This is what the bile |
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27:02 | we're talking about is for now we're gonna go through all the steps because |
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27:07 | think if we went through all the , you'd be like overwhelmed, |
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27:10 | But I want you to like We start off with this big old |
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27:13 | fat bubble. And what we're gonna is we're going to emulsify it using |
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27:18 | to create smaller bubbles, which are to as my seals. Now, |
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27:23 | process of digestion begins in the Now, we don't use bile in |
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27:27 | mouth if you have bile in your . That's a bad thing, |
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27:30 | That's something you're probably thrown up or , right? But we have |
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27:35 | Li Ase. So we begin the of taking triglycerides and we start breaking |
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27:41 | down into free fatty acids and the are all backbones. All right. |
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27:47 | go down to the stomach and you gastric Liba gastric lip lase continues the |
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27:54 | of breaking things down. You move into the small intestine and then here |
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28:00 | where you're gonna have a pancreatic lip and this is where the bile comes |
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28:05 | because you're slowing down everything. Remember duodenum is saying, I want to |
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28:09 | my time and break everything down so can absorb it. So what I'm |
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28:14 | do is I'm slowing down this I'm introducing bile, which is basically |
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28:20 | that big old fat bubbles because the keeps wanting to hang out with itself |
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28:25 | we're going to make it so that creates these smaller bubbles. And then |
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28:29 | we take this small my seal, have an enzyme called lipase and another |
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28:35 | called co lipase, which is derived a vitamin. And what it does |
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28:40 | it comes in is able to bind chemicals in the bio that have inserted |
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28:47 | into that membrane and it hangs out says, now I have a place |
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28:50 | perch so I can start breaking down . And what you do is you |
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28:54 | breaking down layers and layers of these molecules and as they get broken |
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28:58 | they're gonna get absorbed by the uh of the, the Luminal cells of |
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29:05 | digestive system. Now, when we that, all right, remember fats |
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29:12 | want to be in water. It matter if they're inside a cell. |
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29:14 | doesn't matter if they're outside of a , they hate the water, the |
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29:17 | hates them. It's a mutual Right. They are excluded from one |
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29:22 | . So, if you want to fat through the body, you have |
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29:25 | find unique ways to keep it away water. So when a free fatty |
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29:31 | gets absorbed, it's immediately transported. molecule, grabs it, transports it |
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|
29:38 | helps it uh get packaged up into structure called the Kylo Myron. So |
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|
29:43 | a weird word, Kylo Myron. it's taking proteins and fats. And |
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|
29:48 | you do is you pack it all , you create this bundle that you |
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|
29:52 | now release through a vesicle. this bundle of proteins and fats is |
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|
29:58 | big to be taken up into the . And this is why we need |
|
|
30:03 | that lymphatic structure that sits in those tiny villa. Right? And so |
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|
30:10 | we're, what we're doing is to the fat to where it wants to |
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|
30:13 | out, whether it be to be as fuel or whether it to store |
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30:16 | up for later use like me. right, I'm gonna use Kics for |
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30:23 | form of transport. Now, the salts aren't going to be absorbed. |
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30:29 | they stay inside the lumen and they'll broken down or they'll be reused. |
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30:34 | other words, they'll just kind of recycled, but ultimately, they'll be |
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30:37 | down and used. Now. I don't want to go into this too |
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30:44 | here. But you, you have taught at some point that fats are |
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30:49 | for you. Right? Don't eat . Stay away from fats, fats |
|
|
30:54 | . That's not true. Ok, are an important fuel and we'll see |
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|
30:57 | in just a moment. But what need to do is we need to |
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|
31:00 | this through the body. And so words probably look familiar to you. |
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|
31:04 | you heard of H D L Have you heard of L D L |
|
|
31:09 | ? You may not have heard, some of you may have have heard |
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|
31:12 | V L D L s. All . They're all related to each other |
|
|
31:17 | they're related to Kylo Micros, So Kylo Micros are how you package |
|
|
31:22 | fats and deliver them from the small to other structures. And so this |
|
|
31:28 | lipoproteins, it's triglycerides and this is you just start moving things around. |
|
|
31:34 | , the liver plays an important role packaging fats and moving things around or |
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|
31:39 | fats for fuel, you know, and breaking down fats in the process |
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|
31:45 | beta oxidation, right? But one the things I'm gonna do is I'm |
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|
31:49 | take the cholesterol that's been delivered to . If I'm the liver, I'm |
|
|
31:53 | take the fats that have been delivered me. If I'm the liver and |
|
|
31:56 | gonna repackage them for delivery to some system. Right. So let's say |
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|
32:02 | , I'm sending it to muscle. right, I need to send that |
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|
32:06 | to the muscle. The liver is for packaging that up. I want |
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|
32:10 | send it away for fat, you , to sort up away. I |
|
|
32:13 | to package it up. Ok. so what I'm doing is I'm doing |
|
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32:17 | same type of process that I did the Kylo Myron and I'm creating the |
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32:21 | L D L. All right. as the cholesterol is shed from the |
|
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32:27 | L D L and picked up by cells that V L D L becomes |
|
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32:31 | L D L. And all it's is it's taking the fat and delivering |
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32:36 | someplace. Now you have all this and storage and your body decides, |
|
|
32:44 | know what this is free energy that can use. I want my fat |
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32:49 | from my fat stores. So what does is the fat cells take those |
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32:56 | and package them up and this is we get H D L s. |
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33:01 | V L D L s and L L s are moving from the liver |
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33:05 | the tissues and the H D L moving fat from the fat stores, |
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|
33:12 | adipose tissue to the circulation to the . All right. So those are |
|
|
33:20 | transport mechanisms. So far. So , pretty straightforward stuff. Huh? |
|
|
33:36 | , everything you eat comes from something was living. All right, you |
|
|
33:42 | avoid that. Something had to die order for you to survive. |
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|
33:47 | whether it's a plant, whether it's bacterium, whether it is a cow |
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|
33:55 | whatever, whatever you eat fish, was something that was living at some |
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|
34:01 | , which means it had nucleic All right. So that Cheeto has |
|
|
34:07 | , nucleic acid in it. Does look natural? Especially if you put |
|
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34:12 | flaming hot on it. It looks unnatural, right? But it was |
|
|
34:17 | that was living at one point. need to deal with those particular enzymes |
|
|
34:23 | those particular biomolecules. So we have . These are nucleases. We have |
|
|
34:29 | deoxyribonuclease, we have a ribonuclease. deoxy deals with DNA, the ribonuclease |
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|
34:35 | with R N A. If you anything that is a protein, if |
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34:39 | put anything that is a fat, you put anything that's a nucleic |
|
|
34:42 | if you put anything that is a into your body, you have an |
|
|
34:47 | for the most part that is going break it down into something. This |
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|
34:50 | where I kind of go off on little rants and I apologize with my |
|
|
34:54 | rant for those of you who are scared to death. The bovine |
|
|
34:58 | hormone, right? Oh, B G H. It's in my |
|
|
35:02 | . Well, guess what? There enzymes and, and other hormones and |
|
|
35:06 | in all your food, right? guess what? We have a digestive |
|
|
35:10 | that sees B G H for B G H is a peptide and |
|
|
35:16 | it sees a peptide, what does do pops into the stomach? Stomach |
|
|
35:20 | , hm, that's a peptide chop, chop, chop, |
|
|
35:24 | chop chop, right? The only that are difficult for our body to |
|
|
35:29 | with are the lipids because lipids can't contained inside of the digestive system because |
|
|
35:35 | have cell walls that are made up , of, of lipids. So |
|
|
35:39 | want to slip out and sneak away soon as it's able to. So |
|
|
35:44 | you consume something that has a weird in it, I'll see here. |
|
|
35:52 | are the fish eaters in here who salmon? Just one of the |
|
|
35:59 | And the reason I say one of swimmers because can all of you guys |
|
|
36:02 | like a fish? Did you guys fish superpowers? No, this is |
|
|
36:08 | a comic book. Getting bit by radioactive spider will not give you |
|
|
36:13 | Sorry if the salmon is not making a better swimmer. All right. |
|
|
36:17 | wish it were. Then I'd say . All right. My point is |
|
|
36:22 | that we have enzymes that break these , these genes down. So they |
|
|
36:27 | not inherently being absorbed by your body being used in nefarious ways. Your |
|
|
36:34 | just looks at it and says, , nucleic acids, chop, |
|
|
36:36 | chop, chop, chop. Oh me just break it down even |
|
|
36:39 | Oh, I've got a ribo Let me absorb that and I can |
|
|
36:42 | this ribo sugar sugar for either fuel I can use it to make my |
|
|
36:47 | , uh, nucleus sides and notice have other enzymes that break them down |
|
|
36:55 | further. All right. That was little aunt. So, basically what |
|
|
37:03 | trying to do is don't be afraid what you're eating. I mean, |
|
|
37:05 | you like something and you're like, , I don't know, this might |
|
|
37:07 | bad for me. Just don't eat lot of it. Like me. |
|
|
37:12 | for breakfast, lunch and dinner. . Wow. You guys take your |
|
|
37:22 | , take your vitamins. Gummy Everybody. That is the best, |
|
|
37:28 | is the single best invention Of the century. You didn't have to grow |
|
|
37:34 | with the Flintstone vitamins that I had grow up with. Oh, Flintstone |
|
|
37:41 | . When you get old, they like oats. You know, they |
|
|
37:44 | those big old horse pills that taste dirt. Now, gummy vitamins. |
|
|
37:49 | a winter winner. Why do we vitamins? Well, you need vitamins |
|
|
37:53 | normal metabolism. What they do is serve as one of two things. |
|
|
37:57 | right, they're either gonna be used a precursor to make something else in |
|
|
38:01 | body or they're used as co factors allow certain metabolic activities to occur. |
|
|
38:08 | , the easy way to think about is in terms of breaking them down |
|
|
38:11 | their classes, you have fat soluble you have water soluble. Um, |
|
|
38:16 | almost 100% certain. I don't ask to identify which one is which, |
|
|
38:22 | in the event that I do just the water soluble ones are B&C and |
|
|
38:27 | holly ones must be fat soluble. ? Make it easy. Find the |
|
|
38:30 | one memorize that one. All the are the opposite, right? |
|
|
38:34 | So sorry, fat solubles. These the precursors. I'm gonna use vitamin |
|
|
38:38 | as an example. Here, vitamin is this uh basically it's a long |
|
|
38:43 | with two uh organic rings at the . And it's actually a mere image |
|
|
38:48 | itself. So if you took it split in half, you'd have this |
|
|
38:51 | look exactly the same as the other . And the truth is if you |
|
|
38:54 | an enzyme and split it in you have a new molecule, two |
|
|
38:57 | molecules, I mean that are, the exact same, it's called |
|
|
39:01 | And if you took a MP you learn about the eye and you |
|
|
39:05 | that the eye is dependent upon this called retinol that allows you to have |
|
|
39:11 | . Vitamin A is the precursor for retinol. There's a L not O |
|
|
39:18 | , all right. That's just an . So that would be a precursor |
|
|
39:22 | co enzymes. So remember when we at COBASE, that's an example of |
|
|
39:26 | co factor. It's something that the one needs in order to do its |
|
|
39:30 | . And so what vitamin B and do is they serve as co factors |
|
|
39:34 | particular metabolic activities. And there's a of different B vitamins. There's only |
|
|
39:39 | C vitamin. Now, there are that are essential and there are vitamins |
|
|
39:44 | are non-essential. When you hear the essential, that means I can't make |
|
|
39:48 | , I have to get from my . I mean, or it means |
|
|
39:51 | can't make enough of it quick So I have to get it from |
|
|
39:54 | diet. So essential is gotta get from the diet. Non essential means |
|
|
39:59 | body can produce it. So when pick up your uh Captain Crunch and |
|
|
40:05 | says eight essential vitamins and minerals. it providing for you? Something you |
|
|
40:10 | in your diet? Ok. these are going to be absorbed by |
|
|
40:15 | small intestine hint, hint everything is all these things, carbohydrates proteins, |
|
|
40:21 | , nucleic acids, vitamins, These are all being absorbed in the |
|
|
40:26 | intestine your minerals. This is another one. Uh these are the inorganic |
|
|
40:33 | you can see here, we have major ones where you have to consume |
|
|
40:37 | a bit per day. And then have the trace worms which you need |
|
|
40:39 | little per day. All right, are not used as fuel. What |
|
|
40:42 | do is they work with your nutrients they serve as a way to strengthen |
|
|
40:47 | structures within the bodies. All Um One of the biggest scams uh |
|
|
40:56 | you'll see is you'll see organic, minerals. There's no such thing as |
|
|
41:01 | organic mineral. It's either a mineral it's not. Right. You can't |
|
|
41:08 | get a mineral. I, I I told this to the A P |
|
|
41:10 | . Where do we get our You know? Do we go find |
|
|
41:15 | from special places? No, we take old cars, we grind |
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|
41:20 | down, we take the iron from steel and then we put it in |
|
|
41:24 | cereal as iron fortified. Well, you don't like that, the other |
|
|
41:28 | they get is after they desalinate an , they extract the iron from the |
|
|
41:33 | and they can use that as a to put iron in, in |
|
|
41:37 | uh, in your vitamins. Where does it come from? |
|
|
41:43 | you go out to the ocean, dredge up seashells, which is calcium |
|
|
41:48 | . Grind it down into a powder into a pill. You got |
|
|
41:55 | Hm. Don't like that. let's go find some limestone. We'll |
|
|
41:59 | the same thing. I know it terrible. But if you think about |
|
|
42:04 | all our food comes from, it's horrible. Right. And it hope |
|
|
42:09 | . So my point is, don't be fooled by fancy labels. |
|
|
42:15 | right. It's really simple stuff. . And if you want to check |
|
|
42:18 | the iron thing to see if I'm you the truth. Go buy a |
|
|
42:20 | of iron fortified cereal. Go take cereal and put it in a |
|
|
42:25 | grind it down and then get a good magnet and then run it over |
|
|
42:29 | powder and see if you get filings of it. You will, you |
|
|
42:35 | , won't be a lot because there's a lot of iron in it, |
|
|
42:38 | there's iron. All right. So body stores up stuff that it needs |
|
|
42:45 | there's like these capacities that your body capable of storing and then anything you |
|
|
42:50 | need, you're just gonna pee it on out. All right. So |
|
|
42:53 | , you store, uh, for purposes of heading against your diet |
|
|
43:01 | So let me ask you have, pissed off the, the nutrition people |
|
|
43:04 | . No. Ok. Just let know when that happens. All |
|
|
43:09 | Finally, um, well, not , uh, dealing with, |
|
|
43:12 | balance here. This was always just of frustrating to me because I've, |
|
|
43:18 | know, you learn this after you weight and you're trying to figure out |
|
|
43:21 | to lose weight, you know, for some of us it's always going |
|
|
43:24 | be an issue in life, you , I mean, I think I |
|
|
43:28 | good for like three years of my life and then after that I just |
|
|
43:31 | to hell in a hand basket So it's easy to think in terms |
|
|
43:37 | , well, oh, well, food that I need to eat is |
|
|
43:39 | to be equal to the amount of that I'm going to need to keep |
|
|
43:44 | body going and to do all the for the day. And that's a |
|
|
43:47 | simplified way of looking at energy but it's more than that. All |
|
|
43:52 | . Um, typically what we do though is your energy needs are those |
|
|
43:56 | that you need. And calories again a terrible way to measure food in |
|
|
44:00 | of energy. But that's just what do. But what we say is |
|
|
44:04 | are needed for whatever basal activity we , plus whatever physical activity we |
|
|
44:08 | So if you don't know basal your basal metabolic rate is the minimal |
|
|
44:12 | of energy you need in order to yourself alive. So literally just lying |
|
|
44:16 | the bed and not dying, heart beating, pumping stuff, all |
|
|
44:22 | stuff that is B M R, ? Powering all that activity And that |
|
|
44:27 | up of all the energy your body . That's about 60-75% of the energy |
|
|
44:31 | use per day. So just the that you exist, you're using about |
|
|
44:36 | of the energy that you're taking which is pretty incredible, right? |
|
|
44:42 | out exercising and stuff that only accounts about 15 to 30% which is crazy |
|
|
44:47 | it's like, man, I'm just , I'm just gonna work it |
|
|
44:49 | Nope, that's not gonna be the thing. So if you want to |
|
|
44:52 | lose weight, what you really need do is a adjust how much your |
|
|
44:55 | is using as far as the B R is concerned, there's also the |
|
|
45:00 | effect of food that's also just energy kind of wasted. It's the food |
|
|
45:04 | you're using to digest, absorb and . So it's metabolic activity as |
|
|
45:08 | Now, depending on your age, , your height, your weight, |
|
|
45:12 | that stuff, your formula to figure what all these numbers are, are |
|
|
45:16 | to be different. So if you go look up A B M R |
|
|
45:19 | online, just know that it's not to be as accurate as it could |
|
|
45:22 | . There's always some factor that it's in consideration, right? But that's |
|
|
45:29 | we generally speak. Think of in of energies is B M R and |
|
|
45:36 | physical activity and then how much it to actually break down the food that |
|
|
45:41 | gonna use. No, it's You all have appetites. Do you |
|
|
45:49 | what an appetite is? What's up ? An appetite is a desire to |
|
|
45:53 | food. My appetite is 24 77 a week. If I see |
|
|
45:58 | I wanna eat it. My daughter a girl scout. I have 42 |
|
|
46:03 | of girl scout cookies in the house every day I walk by one of |
|
|
46:07 | cases and I look at it and like I could take a box. |
|
|
46:11 | never know. I don't, it's , very hard for me. So |
|
|
46:18 | a desire to consume food. Notice that there are multiple triggers it is |
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46:22 | necessarily physiological. Ok. Physiological is hunger would be. That's the need |
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46:28 | food. All right. And this signaled by the presence of GRE in |
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46:33 | blood. All right. Grein is hormone that says you need to eat |
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46:38 | now. So when you have those pains or really hunger pangs, that's |
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46:45 | telling you, let's consume food, put food in the body. All |
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46:51 | , here's a fun word, It's one of the hardest words to |
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46:56 | because you look at it. How you wanna say that? Because you |
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47:00 | satiation, right? Which is a word. But satiety and then, |
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47:06 | then E T satiety, this is you feel after eating a meal. |
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47:13 | this is a result of the presence other hormones that basically tells you, |
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47:17 | you're full and you don't need to it anymore. Now, there is |
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47:23 | hormone that's produced in your adipose tissue responsible for inhibiting hunger. You can |
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47:30 | a little picture over here. It's even shown here. All right, |
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47:34 | got Grein versus leptin. All Leptin is this hormone that's produced in |
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47:39 | adipose tissue. It inhibits hunger. supposed to be our friend, but |
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47:46 | is not our friend. It is mean little hormone. All right. |
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47:51 | the thing is about this hormone is when it gets adjusted, readjusting it |
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47:57 | to where it should be is very difficult. All right. And |
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48:01 | what this, this little statement down has to do with. All |
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48:05 | So how much leptin your body produces genetically determined. The less adipose tissue |
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48:11 | have, the less leptin you're gonna more hungry, you're going to |
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48:16 | right? So, if you're thin a rail, right? You have |
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48:20 | B M R, you have the exercise that you're doing, your |
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48:24 | is gonna be telling you it's time eat food. You don't produce a |
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48:27 | of leptin. Those of us who adipose tissue, you're gonna produce more |
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48:32 | . That's gonna say, hey, don't need to eat as much. |
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48:35 | the thing is is that when you too much fat, you end up |
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48:40 | more circulating leptin and your body becomes to the leptin. Yeah. |
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48:47 | So, genetically speaking, that's what saying is that someone who is |
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48:51 | generally speaking will produce that hunger and they, that leptin will come up |
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48:55 | basically say it's time, it's time stop. But the idea is, |
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48:59 | your body is trying to maintain the , right? So you start off |
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49:04 | little leptin and you actually increase the of leptin as you go along. |
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49:09 | like me who started off. What's word I wanna use? Stocky? |
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49:13 | that a pli word? Stocky? gonna use stocky. All right. |
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49:18 | family is stocky. All right. stocky. Like I'm creeping around stocky |
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49:23 | in like, like that. Right. Oh, and it gets |
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49:27 | worse. I I'm I'm just gonna ladies, when you get pregnant, |
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49:31 | leptin numbers go whack a do and way your way your body works. |
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49:37 | I see all these women are now at like what, right, the |
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49:40 | your body works is that you're designed protect the baby until a certain point |
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49:45 | which point your body says, I'm going to protect myself. And |
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49:49 | part of the way that you store fat and store up of nutrients during |
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49:54 | and then afterwards is affected by this right here and it's affected by estrogen |
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50:00 | . So men don't have the same , but it's to make sure that |
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50:04 | guys survive during pregnancy, right? Not in the 21st century, but |
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50:10 | imagine there are gonna be lean times there are gonna be uh uh fat |
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50:14 | , so fasting and feasting times, ? And so over time, your |
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50:20 | had to figure out a way to sure those things stay in balance. |
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50:23 | the idea here to answer the question genetically speaking, how much left can |
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50:26 | produce is genetically determined? So how you produce, how much I produce |
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50:31 | gonna be different? And it gets like I said, it gets a |
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50:34 | weirder and I don't want to go all that. Mhm All right. |
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50:46 | which time do I have? All , I got plenty of time |
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50:50 | Put your hands down. We're not . This is not gonna be on |
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50:53 | test, this is just to freak out. OK. We're gonna get |
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50:56 | reproduction here in just a little All right, you guys heard the |
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51:02 | epigenetics? You know, some of have, some of you are |
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51:05 | I don't know, epi means So it's genetics above what you guys |
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51:07 | learned about in, in a very sense. It's not just your genes |
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51:11 | control things, they're things that are and things that control how your genes |
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51:15 | expressed, right? That are independent what genes you actually have. So |
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51:19 | example, I have a fear of , not because I fell 20 |
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51:23 | I actually had a fear of heights before then. My dad has a |
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51:26 | of heights. My grandfather had a of heights. Why it was something |
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51:31 | was imprinted upon a particular gene that heights equals danger and has been passed |
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51:36 | generation to generation to generation two of kids have the same fear of |
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51:41 | You know, they've never been up top of anything worth falling. All |
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51:45 | . But it, it exists, ? So, epigenetics is some is |
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51:49 | way we control gene expression on top the presence of whatever particular gene |
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51:54 | All right. Now, I'm gonna to explain this in such a way |
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51:57 | I don't confuse you. All But ladies, your Reproductive systems, |
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52:07 | all both males and female reproductive systems developed at the same time, about |
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52:10 | 22 of gestation. So, egg sperm come together 22 weeks later. |
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52:16 | when the reproductive systems are being formed the embryo. All right, The |
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52:23 | reproductive system is already building up the it needs for when it becomes sexually |
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52:31 | . 14-16 years later, males, wait until the 14 or 16 years |
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52:36 | really kind of start developing that. you uh when you were in or |
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52:44 | you were basically in, I'm talking the ladies for a moment when you |
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52:47 | in inside your mother as she was inside her mother. All right. |
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52:54 | remember she is undergoing development, she's her reproductive system. You're, you |
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53:00 | half of that O or you, are the O plus a sperm. |
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53:05 | that O is having epigenetic markers being on that o based on what's going |
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53:12 | with your grandmother and her environment. put this, I know it's, |
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53:19 | , it's, it's weird. So example that's most used in explaining this |
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53:23 | you, you brought up the leptin who were um were pregnant during the |
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53:30 | depression were, you know, were and not eating well, right? |
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53:36 | then what they did is they gave to a, to a little |
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53:39 | the little girl grew up and then got pregnant and had her child, |
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53:44 | grandchild and the grandchild was basically whenever eat, she'd basically store up food |
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53:50 | , or, or, you nutrients because her grandmother experienced starvation because |
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53:57 | gene genetic marker said lean times, got to pass it on to my |
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54:04 | . So that's kind of some of stuff that you're describing, you |
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54:08 | that would be the example of a determination. Weird. Yeah. So |
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54:17 | that tells you is your grandparent, grandkids ladies are gonna have to cope |
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54:23 | and deal with the stuff that you're with or are basically creating defenses for |
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54:29 | you're dealing with right now. you're not pregnant but maybe for |
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54:33 | whoever happened to be pregnant, just about that while you're pregnant that |
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54:37 | you're imparting to your grandchildren. Those . I went way off the track |
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54:46 | . Ok. All right. Let's this bad boy up. So, |
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54:51 | what I said, you can live a diet of Cheetos. Can you |
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54:56 | on a diet of Cheetos? no, but could you do it |
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55:00 | say a week? I mean, , let's just say, you |
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55:03 | it's, it's end of days, know, zombie apocalypse type stuff. |
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55:07 | you go and live off Twinkies for little while? Sure. Right. |
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55:12 | the reason for it is because of , well, I love this picture |
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55:15 | over here because what you gotta do we think of nutrition simply. All |
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55:19 | , all I gotta do is meet needs of my body and I'll produce |
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55:23 | the energy I need and, and will be good to go. But |
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55:27 | thing is, is that we don't 24/7. Well, some of us |
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55:32 | eat. I, I may be as I sit here and drink my |
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55:38 | . When we take in nutrients, take them in at very specific |
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55:42 | We go through periods of feasting, go through periods of fasting. But |
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55:46 | thing is your brain always, always needs glucose. And so what |
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55:52 | do is given um what it is we're consuming is we're able to convert |
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55:59 | thing into others. All right. other words, it's not necessarily what |
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56:06 | eat. It's how I am able convert it from one thing to the |
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56:11 | . Now again, we're gonna see this is a nuanced statement, |
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56:18 | Because there are certain things that are . Like if you eat just a |
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56:22 | diet, are you gonna survive? ? Why? Right? There's an |
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56:31 | amino acid that you don't get. so eventually you will deplete yourself of |
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56:35 | amino acid. And then now your can't make certain proteins which will cause |
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56:41 | , right? But the idea as long as I'm consuming things, |
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56:47 | body should be able to shift based need. Now, when you are |
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56:53 | and digesting, absorbing food that's called absorptive state. And this usually is |
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56:58 | first four hours you think of the plus the first four hours after |
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57:03 | So that's roughly the absorptive state, know, the time it's roughly |
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57:09 | So here what you're doing is you're glucose amino acids and free fatty acids |
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57:13 | you're shifting them from, from the system and you're putting them into the |
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57:19 | . So you're basically creating an environment there is a nutrient rich environment. |
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57:24 | so your body is going to do couple of things with this, |
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57:27 | It's gonna take glucose for example. it's going to send that to the |
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57:31 | into the muscle cells and the liver cells. Ok? I can't use |
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57:34 | right? This second. But what can do is I can store it |
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57:37 | and so I'm gonna make up All right. So it's storing up |
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57:40 | in the form of glycogen. All , it says, hey, adipose |
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57:44 | , we got all these fats floating . All right, what we want |
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57:47 | to do is we want you to that up. So remember we package |
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57:49 | those fats up, we send them the fat tissues, the fat. |
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57:52 | does it do? It says, right, I will store it |
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57:55 | So what we do is we create from the free fatty acids and we |
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58:01 | things up that way. All this is called lipogenesis. And the |
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58:06 | thing that we're gonna do is we those amino acids and we can do |
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58:11 | couple of things with them. But what we're doing is we want to |
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58:13 | proteins out of them. All So, when you consume proteins, |
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58:18 | make yourself bigger and stronger. All , presuming you're exercising. Now, |
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58:24 | time between meals, now that you're there going, wait a second, |
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58:27 | have a meal at noon and I a meal at six. So, |
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58:30 | you're telling me is my absorptive and absorptive states are kind of overlapping and |
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58:34 | like, yeah, we probably eat much. But, you know, |
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58:39 | kind of how we're wired is to too much. Now, what we're |
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58:44 | during the post absorptive state is all glucose and free amino acids and the |
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58:50 | and the free fatty acid, what done is we've kind of removed them |
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58:55 | the blood and now our body is looking for those for the purposes of |
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58:59 | or for building or whatever. And now we have to move things out |
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59:03 | circulation. I should have pointed out I failed to do so, this |
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59:06 | under the control of insulin in the state. When you get to the |
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59:10 | absorptive state, you're switching which hormones . It's Glucagon. And so |
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59:16 | what we're doing is we're basically breaking glycogen. So that's glycogenolysis. So |
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59:22 | , the glucose that we stored up glycogen is now being broken down. |
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59:25 | we can free up glucose, those that we stored up in the adipose |
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59:30 | . Well, we're going to break fat down through the process of lipolysis |
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59:34 | free up those, those fats for tissues to consume. And then notice |
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59:39 | in this statement, we have nothing about proteins because you don't want to |
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59:43 | down proteins. If you break down , your body, you're basically destroying |
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59:47 | body. This is just a different if you want to see what all |
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59:52 | interaction and talking looks like. So food that we eat can be used |
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60:00 | as building blocks or can be used fuel, fuel. And what I |
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60:03 | to focus here on is on fuel . And again, this is one |
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60:06 | those things. It's just showing you we can go from consuming a fat |
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60:11 | providing energy through the same pathways as did. If we took in |
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60:16 | All right, different pathways or different pathways result in shared pathways. All |
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60:24 | . So what we're gonna do is gonna take molecules and we're gonna do |
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60:27 | through a process of oxidation. This a chemical reaction. All right. |
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60:32 | what we're gonna do is we're going pull from this chemical reaction energy in |
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60:36 | form of A T P. All . So glucose is con converted through |
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60:41 | stages. It goes through a process glycolysis, then through pyro oxidation through |
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60:47 | citric acid acid cycle and ultimately through electron transport chain, glycerol, which |
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60:53 | the backbone of the triglyceride and the fatty acids. What they do is |
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60:58 | can enter them in the glycerol can through here through the um process of |
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61:05 | about midway through. And then the fatty acids. What you can do |
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61:08 | you can clip off portions of that acid chain in form of uh uh |
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61:12 | structure called acetyl coa which is going be found down here. So it |
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61:18 | through the citric acid cycle and amino . What you can do is you |
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61:22 | them, basically take off the amine then you get rid of that through |
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61:26 | urine. And then you're going to different steps depending upon which amino acid |
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61:31 | using. So you can come through glyco, you can come down through |
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61:35 | acid and there's other steps within the acid cycle that you can take advantage |
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61:40 | . Now, in all of these have I said specifically how each one |
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61:44 | being used? Did I say you to do this? This is the |
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61:48 | . This is the enzyme. So under no circumstances. What we go |
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61:53 | here, do I want you to enzymes? All right, this is |
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61:57 | that class. You want to do class. That's biochemistry, tons and |
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62:01 | of fun. My other point here that you can go from one type |
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62:07 | the other as long as you get 45-50 essential nutrients into your body, |
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62:13 | , as long as you're not over , you're going to keep yourself alive |
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62:16 | going. Now this is that point I kind of pissed off the |
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62:20 | They're like, no, no, , no, no, no, |
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62:21 | a second. But remember the key is there's 45 to 50 essential |
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62:27 | So, if you can get then everything else is just kind of |
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62:31 | , I've got the nutrients that I use to inter convert. So what |
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62:37 | wanna do is I want to go this process of cellular respiration, |
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62:40 | this glucose metabolism, I got 10 here and it's thick. All |
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62:47 | It's, it's not the fun But what I want to point out |
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62:52 | is that we're looking at starting points ending points. All right, we're |
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62:55 | looking at all the steps. All . And what we're doing is if |
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62:59 | think of each chemical as having that, that atom, that element |
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63:04 | you have a bond between them, , that bond represents energy. And |
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63:07 | we're doing is we're breaking the bond releasing the energy in a controlled fashion |
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63:11 | that we can trap it. And we're not doing a very good |
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63:14 | of it because none of this is efficient, but it's a lot better |
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63:18 | just letting it explode, which is of what you do. It's like |
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63:21 | a match if you didn't do it a controlled fashion, if you take |
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63:23 | match and put it into a bucket gasoline, you get an explosion, |
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63:28 | ? But if you take that same and put a spark to it in |
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63:30 | engine. It's in a controlled You can capture some of the energy |
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63:33 | you can move a vehicle with That's the same thing that we're doing |
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63:37 | is we have an engine to trap energy. So glucose oxidation is based |
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63:41 | this chemical reaction right here. You see there's glucose, there's oxygen, |
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63:44 | gives you carbon dioxide, water and free energy in the form of A |
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63:48 | P. What we're doing is we're to oxidize the glucose and we're going |
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63:52 | reduce the oxygen. We say we're because we're giving electrons to oxygen. |
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63:57 | the easy way to think about So you can see the oxygen becomes |
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64:01 | . We're oxidizing the glucose, we're removing the electrons here and passing them |
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64:09 | there. And so the four stages we're interested in are gonna be glycolysis |
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64:15 | oxidation citric acid cycle and the electron chain. And these are the steps |
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64:22 | takes place in the cytoplasm. The of them are going to take place |
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64:25 | the mitochondria. So what we're doing we're going to take a glucose molecule |
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64:30 | six carbons, they're going to go 10 steps. The first five steps |
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64:34 | the investment steps. If you want make money by investing, what do |
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|
64:38 | have to do? First? You to write a check out, |
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64:41 | And you say take this money. now you're out of money, |
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64:46 | And you say when I, at end of this cycle, I wanna |
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64:49 | my money, plus the money you me back, right? So |
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64:52 | that's the return on the investment. the first five steps are the |
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64:56 | the other five steps are the return investment. And what you're going to |
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65:00 | is you're going to put in a bunch of different things. So here |
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65:04 | start off with those, those six you put in an electron carrier that |
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|
65:08 | up electrons that we're going to deal a little bit later. So that's |
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65:11 | that molecule is there that NAD there's of them and they each grab an |
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65:16 | and then we put in two A P and we pull out four A |
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65:20 | . So the net gain is two P, right? If I spent |
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65:24 | and got 44 minus two is All right. And in the |
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65:30 | I took this glucose and I split , split it into 23 carbon molecules |
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65:34 | pyro. All right. So notice we don't even talk about the |
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65:39 | All right. And why we talk the beginning and the end and what |
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65:42 | get out is because we can use in the other steps, right? |
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65:45 | electron transporter is going to be used make more ATP. Now, if |
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65:51 | is all you're gonna do, notice don't get a lot of A T |
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65:54 | out of this. And this can a single uh uh reaction that |
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65:59 | that we use. But in the , what you're going to get is |
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66:02 | going to get two molecules of you're gonna get two molecules of A |
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66:05 | P and you get two molecules of electron carrier that's carrying the electron, |
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66:09 | N AD plus H plus. All . The second step is pyro |
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|
66:15 | Notice it begins with what you ended and what you're going to do here |
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66:19 | you're going to get two more electron and they're going to pick up |
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66:23 | And what you're going to do is going to oxidize those pyro molecules and |
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|
66:28 | going to capture carbon dioxide. So take a three carbon molecule and you |
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|
66:32 | it into a two carbon molecule. two carbon molecule is called acetate. |
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|
66:37 | what you do is you are adding the end of it, this other |
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66:42 | unit, which is called CO it's coenzyme A and so the end |
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|
66:47 | is called acetyl coa. So it's real short reaction. And so there's |
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66:53 | two carbon molecules starting from the three account for the carbon over there. |
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|
66:56 | you're doing this twice. But we're saying for each pyro rate. So |
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67:00 | each one of those, you're getting acetyl coa you're doing one molecule in |
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67:05 | and you're getting one molecule of carbon . So the Aal coa and we're |
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67:09 | we're taking the electron uh the electron and we're gonna just hold them off |
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67:12 | the side for a moment. So gonna take that molecule acetyl coa and |
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|
67:17 | gonna drop it into the next right? This is just like baking |
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|
67:21 | cake. What do I do? put all the stuff in a |
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67:23 | I mix the bowl, then I it in the oven. I take |
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67:25 | out of the oven. I put on a plate. I let it |
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67:28 | for a little bit. And then am I gonna do? I'm gonna |
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|
67:30 | icing on the top at the What do you have a cake? |
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67:34 | ? It all started with ingredients. the same thing we're doing here. |
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|
67:37 | in third step. So we're gonna that ingredient. We're moving from one |
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67:40 | the next. We take the acetal we drop it into this cycle. |
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67:44 | citric acid cycle, a cycle implies it that it's continuous and it is |
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67:50 | all you're doing is you're adding in thing and things are going to fall |
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67:53 | along the way and you kind of back to the beginning and then you |
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|
67:56 | it in a and you just keep cycle going over and over again. |
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68:00 | it's in, in what we refer as a steady state. So there's |
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68:05 | whole bunch of reactions going on But what you're doing at the end |
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|
68:08 | you're getting a T P So there's more A T P right there and |
|
|
68:12 | creating a whole bunch of electron the net H and the fat H |
|
|
68:16 | are electron carriers. And then you're that two carbon molecule into carbon |
|
|
68:22 | So you now captured all your carbon carbon dioxide. If you started from |
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|
68:26 | with six, you now have your carbon dioxide, but we haven't made |
|
|
68:30 | yet, have we? So what have to do now is we have |
|
|
68:34 | make water. And where does the come from? It came from the |
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|
68:38 | and that oxygen we said was reduced we reduce it by giving it |
|
|
68:42 | And at each of these stages, did we do? We had a |
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68:45 | of electron carriers, didn't we? what we're going to do is let's |
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68:48 | those electron carriers and let's throw them the last stage. It's called the |
|
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68:51 | transport chain. And again, we're not looking at each of the |
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68:56 | steps. So what we're gonna do we're gonna take these electron carriers and |
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68:58 | moving them to this oxidative phosphorated If oxygen is available, we are |
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69:03 | to replenish the electron carriers by removing electron from it and then sending it |
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69:09 | to the place where it began. there is no auction available, we're |
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69:13 | to go through a process of which is basically saying, hey, |
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69:17 | going to have an alternate step for and we're going to see that at |
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69:19 | very last slide here in theory. then what we do is we say |
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69:25 | going to replace it in a different , but we're not going to get |
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69:27 | much A T P out of But if you go into oxidative |
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69:31 | there we go. What you do you have this little pathway and you |
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69:34 | all of those electron carriers and you it through And depending upon which electron |
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69:39 | you have, you get a certain of pumps in that chain. And |
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69:45 | of those pumps represents you pumping a into the mitochondrial matrix. And then |
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69:52 | you do is you have a enzyme says every time you pump one out |
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69:57 | the matrix, you make an A P, it's called A T P |
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70:01 | . So all of those electron carriers being moved in the presence of oxygen |
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70:07 | this. And at the end of chain, the oxygen gets that |
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70:11 | And that's how you make the A P because that proton passing through to |
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70:15 | that water forces you to make an T P on the other side. |
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70:21 | then now I can count up all A P. So I made a |
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70:24 | P in the first step plus my carriers. I made a P in |
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70:28 | third step plus my electron carriers, made electron carriers in the second |
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70:32 | And then all those electron carriers come and I make a, with each |
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70:36 | them And the big picture in the end, what do I end up |
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70:39 | is somewhere between 32 and 38 Each one of these, if you |
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70:45 | to a different textbook, they'll give a different number. It's based on |
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70:48 | , on, on moles. So actual number doesn't matter. But in |
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70:53 | grand scheme of things, you can how I'm getting all that A T |
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70:58 | . It's coming from all those electron through this process or these processes. |
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71:04 | way to look at it is you just add it all up and just |
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71:06 | , let me bounce my equation so can do it like that as |
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71:12 | Now notice, have I asked you of the steps? Do you need |
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71:16 | know the steps? What you should is what goes in and what comes |
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71:20 | ? That's the important part, what in and what comes out for each |
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71:25 | of those steps. When it comes fatty acids, we said that it |
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71:30 | these same cycles when you take a acid. What you're doing is you're |
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71:34 | that long chain and you're cleaving off carbons and you're attaching it to a |
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71:39 | A and then what that two carbons the ale and then the CO A |
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71:43 | so you basically move it through that end so that you're going to go |
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71:48 | the citric acid cycle and you can at P out of that. It's |
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71:52 | very, very efficient way to get T P That's beta oxidation. Just |
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71:59 | off two carbons. Turn it into pp. What about proteins? |
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72:05 | with proteins, what I'm gonna do I'm gonna take off the immune |
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72:08 | which basically gets secreted in the form urea. And then what I'm gonna |
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72:14 | is I'm gonna uh take that backbone I'm going to convert it to |
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72:19 | Remember how many carbons prate have right? And then I'm gonna take |
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72:25 | three, turn it into 22, in citric acid cycle. I'm gonna |
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72:29 | a T P from it. So you eat proteins, what do you |
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72:33 | a T P A T P? I eat fats, what do I |
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72:39 | A T P if I eat What do I get? If I |
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72:43 | nucleic acids? I don't know what get. No, it's not just |
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72:45 | part of this stuff, but you do it. Here's the last |
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72:49 | I promise you. I know I'm over, but I think you'd rather |
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72:52 | tell you if there's no oxygen Pyro is a molecule, we convert |
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72:58 | is a three carbon molecule. What going to do is we're going to |
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73:00 | it into another three carbon molecule called . Lactate, accepts the electrons from |
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73:07 | electron carriers so that you can recycle . So you can keep this process |
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73:12 | and instead what we get is lact lactic acid right now, in this |
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73:18 | , we don't get a lot of out of it. So, if |
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73:20 | stuck with it, if you have oxygen, you're getting some A T |
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73:23 | and you're keeping the cells alive, you're not getting a lot of A |
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73:26 | P. This is not a good . All right, it's only happens |
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73:31 | we're running out of oxygen. So when we go to fermentation. Although |
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73:35 | is awesome because you can make beer it. All right, we have |
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73:40 | exam on Tuesday. Yeah. So , don't show up here. Um |
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73:48 | I will see you on Thursday for last unit. We're three quarters of |
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73:52 | way done. Have a great |
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