Structure and Function of the Nucleus - BCH448H1
This course examines the structure and function of the cell nucleus and the eukaryotic genome, and their role in organizing biological information. A special emphasis is placed on covering how major concepts in gene expression and regulation were developed. Topics covered include:
- The discovery of the molecular basis of inheritance, genetic information flow (DNA, rRNA, tRNA, mRNA)
- Ribozymes, splicing
- The origin of the eukaryotic nucleus, the spliceosome, introns
- The role of population genetics on genome organization
- Chromatin organization, the 3D-architecture of the chromosomes
- The nuclear pore complex, nuclear trafficking (with an emphasis on mRNA nuclear export)
- Mitosis
- Nuclear envelope breakdown and reassembly during cell division
- Nuclear movement during cell polarity
Prerequisites:
BCH210H/242Y;
BCH311H or MGY311Y or PSL350H
Course Coordinator:
Alexander Palazzo
Scheduling:
Winter Term
Monday and Wednesday: 1:00pm - 2:00pm
Enrollment Cap:
45