Lecturers
Giovanni D'Angelo and Bruno Emanuel Correia
Language
English
Summary
Biochemistry is a key discipline in the Life Sciences. Biological Chemistry I and II are two tightly interconnected courses that aims to understand in molecular terms the processes that make life possible.
Content
In Biological Chemistry II we will focus on cell metabolism to understand how the molecules that constitute living beings are produced, modified and used for energetic purposes. A specific emphasis will be put on the understanding of organizing principles in metabolism and on the regulatory circuits living beings have evolved to control their metabolic outputs.
Bioenergetics and cell metabolism (I)
[Glycolysis-TCA cycle-PPP-oxidative phosphorylation-B oxidation-AA oxydation]
Bioenergetics and cell metabolism (II)
[Energy storage TAG synthesis and gluconeogenesis]
Bioenergetics and cell metabolism (III)
[Energy and nutrient sensing cell growth/ autophagy]
Bioenergetics and cell metabolism (IV)
[Cellular metabolic specialization, liver muscle and adipose tissue metabolism]
Enzymology (I)
[Enzymes regulation by PTMs]
Enzymology (II)
[Methods to study enzymatic regulation/ proteomics]
Enzymology (III)
[Engineering enzymes]
Building a Cell (I)
[Carbohydrate biosynthesis, AA, and NA biosynthesis]
Building a Cell (II)
[Lipid biosynthesis]
Building a Cell (III)
[Compartmentalization]
Metabolic circuits (I)
[Feedback mechanisms and metabolic network motifs]
Metabolic circuits (II)
[Metabolic Teleonomy and Metabolic Biases]
Keywords
Energy Metabolism, Enzymology, Biosynthetic Pathways, Metabolic Circuits
Learning Prerequisites
Required courses
Biological Chemistry I
Recommended courses
Biology I + II, Organic Chemistry I + II
Important concepts to start the course
Basic understanding of chemical composition of biological matter
Basic understanding of cell organization
Basic understanding of protein structure and function
Basic reaction mechanisms in organic chemistry
Learning Outcomes
By the end of the course, the student must be able to:
Recognize biochemical pathways
Integrate cell compartmentalisation and metabolism
Interpret the topology of metabolic circuits
Transversal skills
Assess one's own level of skill acquisition, and plan their on-going learning goals.
Continue to work through difficulties or initial failure to find optimal solutions.
Demonstrate the capacity for critical thinking
Access and evaluate appropriate sources of information.
Teaching methods
Lectures
Exercise session accompanying each lecture
Exercise session on bioinformatics and protein structure visualization tools
Expected student activities
Attendance to classes
Attendance to exercises
Class participation
Assessment methods
- written exam - the exam will be an "open book" exam and what this means is that you are allowed to bring all the materials provided during the semester (slides, exercises, solutions), but not the recommended books (The Molecules of Life – Principles of Biochemistry).
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