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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
This course is to give students an understanding of Human Anatomy in a clinical format. Anatomy will be studied in a regional manner with an emphasis placed on landmarks and relationships of structure within a region.
Prerequisite:
BIO 214 [Min Grade: D] and BIO 218 [Min Grade: D]
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2.00 Credits
This course is to accompany the Gross Anatomy lecture course and complements the students study of human anatomy by allowing the student to hone their dissection skills through dissection of a preserved mammalian specimen.
Prerequisite:
BIO 214 [Min Grade: D] and BIO 218 [Min Grade: D]
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4.00 Credits
Covers the weak interactions which govern structure and function of biomolecules, including amino acids, proteins (structural organization, isolation, and methods of analysis). Enzymes (structure, catalytic mechanisms, kinetics), lipids and biomembranes, and DNA and RNA folding.
Prerequisite:
CHEM 242 [Min Grade: D]
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2.00 Credits
This course uses kinetic analysis of biochemical data to increase the computational and numerical sophistication used to build sound models of the underlying biological processes. Students start with Excel as the analytical tool. MATLAB is then used as the complexity of the problems demands it.
Prerequisite:
CHEM 242 [Min Grade: D]
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3.00 Credits
Discusses ageing at the organismal, organ, cellular, and molecular levels. Discussions include chronological verses biological aging, normal and abnormal human physiology of aging, current theories of aging, the effect of caloric restriction on aging, and the molecular mechanisms that underlie normal and abnormal aging.
Prerequisite:
BIO 218 [Min Grade: D]
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3.00 Credits
This course aims to elucidate current technologies, theory, and applications of genomic research. Though a large emphasis will be placed on the use of genomic tools to study human health, we will also study the genomes, transcriptomes, and proteomes of bacteria, fungi, plants, and other animals.
Prerequisite:
BIO 218 [Min Grade: D]
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3.00 Credits
Discusses protein structure, function, and isolation. Emphasizes biochemical, biophysical, and molecular biological techniques.
Prerequisite:
BIO 214 [Min Grade: D]
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3.00 Credits
This course focuses on the biochemical bases of several selected human disorders including neoplasm, cardiovascular disorders, diabetes and obesity. Biochemical changes ant their regulation by signaling pathways under the disease conditions will be examined. The relevance of diagnosis and treatment will be discussed.
Prerequisite:
BIO 203 [Min Grade: C] or BIO 311 [Min Grade: C]
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3.00 Credits
Discusses the major viral groups, including biochemistry and molecular genetics of viral replication, structure, gene expression, latency, and role in disease.
Prerequisite:
BIO 218 [Min Grade: D]
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3.00 Credits
The experimental and theoretical basis for the structure and function of biological membranes will be surveyed. Topics include membrane self assembly, bilayer phase behavior and dynamics, membrane protein structure, passive and active transport, membrane fusion and trafficking.
Prerequisite:
BIO 214 [Min Grade: D]
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