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Graduate Courses

BIOL 51606 Pathways in Human Health and Disease

Session Offered:
Fall Credit 3

Prerequisites:

(BIOL 23100 and 24100) or (BIOL 23000)

Description:

  This course is intended for both upper-level undergraduate and graduate students. It will cover major intracellular signaling pathways in eukaryotes and their roles in human disease, with an emphasis on cancer but also touching on other major modern diseases such as COVID-19. We will explore avenues being pursued to target signaling mechanisms for therapeutic benefit. Topics include G protein-coupled receptors, receptor tyrosine kinases, nuclear hormone receptors, protein kinases and phosphatases, mTOR, the Wnt/β-catenin pathway, cell cycle control, DNA damage checkpoint control, regulated proteolysis, and programmed cell death. The course will be taught from current primary literature using a textbook as a background resource. Students will learn how to read and interpret scientific data through regular lectures, extramural seminars, in-class presentations, and take-home assignments.  

Instructor(s):
JOHN TESMER

E-mail:

Textbook(s):
Fall Textbook list PDF Word
Course Format:
CRN SEC Type Cred Day Time Location


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