-
Institution:
-
Williams College
-
Subject:
-
Biology
-
Description:
-
This course explores the regulation of cellular function and gene expression from a perspective that integrates current paradigms in molecular genetics, intracellular trafficking, genomics, and synthetic biology. Topics include: the roles of protein modifications/interactions and lipids in signal transduction, transcriptional and post-transcriptional control, chromosome instability, cellular degradation pathways, epigenetic mechanisms including gene silencing, programmed cell death, and the appropriation of organelle transport pathways by HIV. A central feature of the course will be discussion of articles from the primary literature, with an emphasis on the molecular bases for a variety of human pathologies such as cancer and aging. The laboratory will consist of a semester-long project that incorporates recombinant DNA techniques, quantitative PCR analysis of transcriptional patterns, bioinformatics, and fluorescence-based approaches to examine defense mechanisms common to the innate immune systems of plants and animals. Evaluation will be based on three take-home tests, in-class discussion of papers, laboratory notebook/report, an independent lab research project, and a grant proposal.
-
Credits:
-
3.00
-
Credit Hours:
-
-
Prerequisites:
-
Biology 202
-
Corequisites:
-
-
Exclusions:
-
-
Level:
-
-
Instructional Type:
-
Lecture
-
Notes:
-
-
Additional Information:
-
-
Historical Version(s):
-
-
Institution Website:
-
-
Phone Number:
-
(413) 597-3131
-
Regional Accreditation:
-
New England Association of Schools and Colleges
-
Calendar System:
-
Four-one-four plan
Detail Course Description Information on CollegeTransfer.Net
Copyright 2006 - 2026 AcademyOne, Inc.