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[return to "Ask HN: What scientific phenomenon do you wish someone would explain better?"]
1. umvi+go[view] [source] 2020-04-26 22:20:34
>>qqqqqu+(OP)
I would like to understand how cellular biology processes actually work. Like, how do all the right modules and proteins line up in the right orientation every time? Every time I watch animations, it seems like the proteins and such just magically appear when needed and disappear when not needed [0]. Sometimes it's an ultra-complex looking protein and it just magically flys over to the DNA, attaches to the correct spot, does it's thing, detaches, and flies away. Yeah right! As if the protein is being flown by a pilot. How does it really work?

[0] https://youtu.be/5VefaI0LrgE

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2. knzhou+Yp[view] [source] 2020-04-26 22:34:00
>>umvi+go
The issue with these animations is that they're getting rid of all the thermal noise. In reality, single proteins are flying around the whole length of the cell many times a second, just from their thermal motion. And when processes like DNA transcription happen, they're not like a regular conveyor belt -- a fraction of the time the machine will even accidentally run steps in reverse! However, if any of this were shown, the animations would become impossible to understand.
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3. Jabavu+GG[view] [source] 2020-04-27 01:06:40
>>knzhou+Yp
Yes to getting rid of thermal noise. No ish? to single proteins flying around the cell that fast. The cytosol is incredibly jam-packed and things are getting hung up on other things so we'd expect the mean free path to actually be quite small for the larger biomolecules.
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