BC5101 - Genes, Genomes and Development
Credit points: |
3 |
Year: |
2014 |
Student Contribution Band: |
Band
2
|
Administered by: |
|
Available to students only with permission of the Head of Discipline of Biochemistry
and Molecular Biology.
An understanding of the function and regulation of individual genes is critical to
our understanding of how genetic information (genotype) is transformed into the shape,
size and type of an individual organism (its phenotype). This subject explores the
diverse mechanisms of regulation in both prokaryote and eukaryote systems and the
techniques used to explore them. The subject also describes how different cells differentiate
and develop and introduces the molecular basis of embryology and genome evolution.
Learning Outcomes
- To understand how genetic information is coverted into the appearance of an organism;
- To understand the mechanism responsible for the control of gene expression in a model
system;
- To compare gene expression in organisms.
Inadmissible Subject Combinations:
|
BC3101 AND GG3101 |
Availabilities
|
Townsville,
Internal,
Study Period 1
|
Census Date 27-Mar-2014 |
Coordinator: |
Professor David Miller |
Lecturers:
|
Professor Alan Baxter, Professor David Miller. |
Workload expectations: |
- 30 hours lectures
- 6 hours tutorials
- 4 hours practicals
- 16 hours workshops/Seminars
|
Assessment: |
end of semester exam (65%); assignments (10%); practical exercises (25%). |
Restrictions: |
An enrolment quota applies to this offering.
|
|
|
Note:
Minor variations might occur due to the continuous Subject quality improvement process,
and in case
of minor variation(s) in assessment details, the Subject Outline represents the latest
official information.