Course Identification

Seminar in mRNA trafficking and localization in development & disease
20193252

Lecturers and Teaching Assistants

Dr. Gal Haimovich, Prof. Jeffrey Gerst
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Course Schedule and Location

2019
Second Semester
Wednesday, 11:15 - 13:00, Meyer Rm 106
27/03/2019

Field of Study, Course Type and Credit Points

Life Sciences: Seminar; Elective; 2.00 points
Life Sciences (Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience Track): Seminar; Elective; 2.00 points
Life Sciences (Computational and Systems Biology Track): Seminar; Elective; 2.00 points

Comments

N/A

Prerequisites

Knowledge in molecular biology.

Restrictions

13

Language of Instruction

English

Registration by

27/02/2019

Attendance and participation

Required in at least 80% of the lectures

Grade Type

Pass / Fail

Grade Breakdown (in %)

100%
presenting a paper during the semester, and attending at least 80% of the meetings.

Evaluation Type

Seminar

Scheduled date 1

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-
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Estimated Weekly Independent Workload (in hours)

N/A

Syllabus

The 1st session will be dedicated to an introduction and an overview of the topic:

Why localize RNA?


Methods – biochemical & imaging (FISH, MS2-like, GFP-mimic RNA aptamers, imaging local translation); large-scale analysis


mRNA localization in yeast & mammals as a platform to study the concepts of mRNA localization & local translation regulation.


mRNA trafficking in model organisms and consequences to physiology


mRNA localization to organelles


Extracellular RNA and implications to cancer research


A list of papers will be distributed on the first lecture. Each student will present one paper from the list. Students are expected to read the papers and participate in the discussion.

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of the course, the student will be able to:

  1. Read critically and discuss the current literature related to mRNA trafficking and localization in development & disease.
  2. Demonstrate knowledge of cutting-edge topics in the field.
  3. Manifest familiarity with state-of-the-art methods in the field.

Reading List

Introduction & overview:

  • Buxbaum AR, Haimovich G. & Singer RH (2015) In the right place at the right time: visualizing and understanding mRNA localization. Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology 16, 95–109
  • Jansen RP, Niessing D, Baumann S, and Feldbrugge M (2014) mRNA transport meets membrane traffic. Trends Genet 30, 408-417  

A list of papers to present will be distributed on the first lecture.

Website

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