the cytochrome proteins are. And on that, we know that there's 30 million volts of potential charge from this electrical resistance that oxygen creates. Why? Because
- Concept
- cytochrome
- Cross-concepts
- oxygen
- Score
- 4 · causes · because
- Status
- candidate — not yet promoted to canon
Corpus evidence — top 10 passages
Most-relevant passages from the entire indexed corpus (67,286 paragraph chunks across YouTube transcripts, PubMed, arXiv, archive.org, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, OpenAlex, and more) ranked by semantic similarity (bge-small-en-v1.5).
- 01 · yt0.818
And then when when the two domains join, which is where we're at now, then you have to ask yourself, okay, how did the membrane deal with the 30 million volt charge that was in it? Obviously, that charge is the thing that gets harnessed to build the 32 filo that we already know about. So, this is where the story that I was getting into with you about heem being important. He uh comes up with one of its first proteins. What's that first protein? It's called cytochrome c oxidase. So I'm going to put my fingers up. I don't know if you use videos in your thing or not, but I know that you know this…
yt/67sLlXeMg2I-regenerative-energy-the-light-inside-you-jack-kruse-221/transcript.txt
- 02 · yt0.814
Because where does that cytochrome Where is it found? This is important for you to understand. It's found right before the ATPase. So, you We're creating a huge amount of electrical resistance at that level, so that that energy then can be distributed to other places to cause other innovations in the cell. And doesn't that make sense when you think about the story that Darwin could never figure out? Why all of a sudden did we get 32 phyla seems like overnight? Well, because guess what? We figured out we needed to use photo-bioelectric resistance to capture the light to use it to do other thing…
yt/wwNutyiyQ2I-interview-with-dr-jack-kruse-04-08-2025/transcript.txt
- 03 · yt0.803
It's got 12 electrons. So, when you put it inside that cage, it means light can't affect its oxidation state. So, what did that do? They took CO2, created more oxygen, and that's how you got the whole food uh pyramid. That's where every single food web ties back to that process. 50 year 50 million years later, right at the beginning of the Cambrian explosion, evolution kicks out the idea of heme proteins. Where does it get this idea? From the story I just told you. Oxygen now is going from 0% up to like 10 or 15% and oxygen's toxic, so they take bacteria and and archaea, put them together. And…
yt/wwNutyiyQ2I-interview-with-dr-jack-kruse-04-08-2025/transcript.txt
- 04 · _intake0.787
This is a critical point between the two major arms of metabolism. Mitochondrial cytochrome proteins are like MRI machines for electrons and protons. They are designed to tell the difference in the energies of electrons and protons energies and information. From those two physical differences, the proteins within the cytochromes dictate the pathway where those subatomic particles should flow.
_intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/energy-epigenetics-12-battery-charged.md
- 05 · _intake0.784
In a semiconductor chips, this breakdown of this layer can also happen if the network somehow “acquires a voltage somewhat” higher than the normal operating voltage of the chip. How does this play out in biology? What protein is at cytochrome 1? There is an NADH and NAD+ coupled pair. **Did you know that the protein NADH has the ability to handle a higher intrinsic power intensity than NAD+ does?** Did you also know that all carbohydrate electrons fill into cytochrome one at NADH? Did you know that all electrons from carbohydrates have higher powered photons associated with them? On the ” back…
_intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/ubiquitination-14-electrosensitivity-is-antenna-failure.md
- 06 · _intake0.774
This symmetry has a fundamental basis when we consider the sizes of matter in the quantum world. Massive 30 million volts electrical charges in the inner mitochondrial membrane come into contact with low energy protons that are spit out of the mouth of cytochromes into fixed iron sulfur targets. That’s the only type of reaction going on, in my opinion, in the Sun or a mitochondria. I believe it is wholly an electrical phenomenon, called a plasmoid reaction. This brings up an interesting point; can an electric charge or discharge change the amount of mass in a cell in someway we cannot yet meas…
_intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/sea-of-change-could-be-a-sea-of-charge.md
- 07 · yt0.770
That's where the other cytochrome proteins are made. And the other cytochrome proteins further were able to make other uh magneto-chemistry, which is superoxide, hydrogen peroxide. These are all chemicals that become electric resistance molecules that slow light down to do different things distal to it. And when you actually see what nitric oxide does, it also acts at cytochrome c oxidase, which is the fourth cytochrome, right before the ATPase. So, now you have a cap on how hemoglobin can work, and it turns out when nitric oxide binds to hemoglobin at a significant amount when we're hypoxic, …
yt/wwNutyiyQ2I-interview-with-dr-jack-kruse-04-08-2025/transcript.txt
- 08 · yt0.769
But at the beginning of life, they didn't have these heme proteins. So, that would have caused massive unfettered growth of the joining of both bacteria and archaea so that you would eventually get that. And what happened over the process, I I guess you would call it of empiricism, testing it, we came up with the idea of of heme proteins. Why? Because then we could control oxygen at low levels. And as we gained control, what were the control mechanisms that are obvious today in our patients, but we don't get taught this in biochemistry? Pretty simple. What do you know about oxygen? It's parama…
yt/wwNutyiyQ2I-interview-with-dr-jack-kruse-04-08-2025/transcript.txt
- 09 · _intake0.764
These interactions begin to explain why DNA only codes for proteins that operate in these specific ranges of electronic energies. Proteins are larger models of a school of electrons and protons that generate electric fields. In this way, we can think of proteins like we view a school of fish swimming coherently. They all work together under the control of sunlight. **Proteins have side chains that recapitulate the positive and negative charge distributions we see in atoms which also act to distort the electron charge distribution in the proteins.** These two variables are highly conserved and …
_intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/time-23-dna-codes-quantum-evolution.md
- 10 · yt0.761
And one of the things that Nick Lane brought to the world, I'd say probably 15 20 years ago in his book Power, Sex, and Suicide, he's the first person that ever accurately uh deciphered some of the things that Lyn Margula said. But one of the things that she clearly said in her work is that the inner mitochondrial membrane is really unique for two real things. First thing is it has no DHA in It's one of the only membranes in mammals that has no DHA. It still retains its its bacterial uh composition. And the other thing is it's only five to six angstroms big. So that means it carries a 30 milli…
yt/67sLlXeMg2I-regenerative-energy-the-light-inside-you-jack-kruse-221/transcript.txt
Curation checklist
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