Course Identification

Guided reading course: Protein structure and function 2
20202042

Lecturers and Teaching Assistants

Prof. Amnon Horovitz, Prof. Emmanuel Levy
N/A

Course Schedule and Location

2020
Second Semester
Thursday, 14:15 - 16:00, WSoS, Rm 2
23/04/2020

Field of Study, Course Type and Credit Points

Chemical Sciences: Guided Reading Course; Elective; Regular; 2.00 points
Chemical Sciences (Materials Science Track): Guided Reading Course; Elective; Regular; 2.00 points
Life Sciences: Guided Reading Course; Elective; Regular; 2.00 points
Life Sciences (Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience Track): Guided Reading Course; Elective; Regular; 2.00 points

Comments

Will be taught via Zoom starting April 19th.
(1) The courses that are attended by less than 4 students will be cancelled
(2) Cluster - Bio-related

Prerequisites

Protein Structure and Function I

Restrictions

20

Language of Instruction

English

Attendance and participation

Obligatory

Grade Type

Numerical (out of 100)

Grade Breakdown (in %)

100%

Evaluation Type

Seminar

Scheduled date 1

N/A
N/A
-
N/A

Estimated Weekly Independent Workload (in hours)

6

Syllabus

The course is based on critical reading of research papers and student/instructor discussion of advanced topics in protein structure/function. The diversity of interests, backgrounds , and opinions among the students contributes to rich debate and a deep and thorough evaluation of each article under discussion. Topics will include:

  1. Protein thermodynamics.
  2. Bioinformatics and protein fold prediction methods.
  3. Experimental and theoretical studies of protein folding.
  4. Protein design and in vitro evolution.
  5. Dynamics, conformational changes, and cooperativity in protein function.

Learning Outcomes

Upon successful completion of this course students should be able to:

Analyze and critique contemporary research articles in protein science in the following manner: Explain the experimental rationale, suggest alternative approaches, uncover caveats, derive equations, argue for other interpretations of the data, or defend and justify the conclusions.

Reading List

One paper on the topic of protein science will be assigned per week, to be prepared for discussion by all the students. The selection of papers will be given at the beginning of the semester.

Website

N/A