Nobel Prize Awarded Cell Biology I

Data

Official data in SubjectManager for the following academic year: 2020-2021

Course director

  • Dr. Marianna PAP

    associate professor,
    Department of Medical Biology and Central Electron Microscope Laboratory

Number of hours/semester

lectures: 24 hours

practices: 0 hours

seminars: 0 hours

total of: 24 hours

Subject data

  • Code of subject: OSF-NS1-T
  • 2 kredit
  • Dentistry
  • Optional modul
  • autumn
Prerequisites:

-

Course headcount limitations

min. 1 – max. 200

Topic

The aim of the course is to present the most important and most exciting Nobel Prize-winning molecular cell biology discoveries based on Nobel lectures given by the winners. The background story of the awards reveals many years of research work, good ideas, good fortune mixed with family and other personal memories. There is no single recipe for success, the road is always a bit different, and perhaps the only common feature is the teamwork. From the presentations one might get insight of the winners’ personality as well. An important aspect was in the selection of the topics to emphasize their significance (DNA-, RNA-structure and their synthesis, ribosome function), their impact on current medical way of thinking (e.g. Prions) and diagnostic methods (e.g. recombinant DNA technology, DNA sequencing), the description of their present and future medical applicability (e.g. in vitro fertilization), as well as to highlight their potential relations to different diseases (e.g. cell cycle regulation, reprogram of differentiated cells, RNA interference, papillomaviruses, HIV). Lectures are organized based on the topics related to the weekly schedule of the molecular cell biology course, not in chronological order. Most of the presented discoveries and experiments are involved in the molecular cell biology course material, so hopefully their discussion helps in the better understanding of those topics and lead to a more effective and shorter exam preparation.

Lectures

  • 1. Life of Alfred Nobel - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 2. History of Nobel prize, interesting facts - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 3. Structure of proteins - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 4. Prions - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 5. Structure of nucleic acids, catalytic RNA molecules - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 6. Recombinant DNA technology - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 7. PCR - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 8. DNA sequencing - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 9. Inhibition of gene expression (KO mutation) - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 10. Inhibition of gene expression (RNA interference) - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 11. Regulation of cell cycle - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 12. Regulation of cell cycle - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 13. DNA replication - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 14. DNA repair - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 15. Eukaryotic RNA synthesis - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 16. Splicing - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 17. Structure and function of ribosomes - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 18. Role of RNA molecules in translation, Genetic code - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 19. Gene regulation in prokaryotic cells - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 20. Gene regulation in eukaryotic cells - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 21. Rough endoplasmic reticulum, vesicular transport - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 22. Receptor-mediated endocytosis - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 23. Exam - Dr. Pap Marianna
  • 24. Exam - Dr. Pap Marianna

Practices

Seminars

Reading material

Obligatory literature

Literature developed by the Department

Notes

Recommended literature

www.nobelprize.org

Conditions for acceptance of the semester

Maximum of 25 % absence allowed

Mid-term exams

2 written tests: on week 7 and on week 14.

Making up for missed classes

Participation on Hungarian or German lectures is the only possibility to make-up missed lectures.

Exam topics/questions

.

Examiners

Instructor / tutor of practices and seminars