Download 1 This document outlines the learning objectives (what students will

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Adaptive evolution in the human genome wikipedia , lookup

Genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup

DNA vaccination wikipedia , lookup

No-SCAR (Scarless Cas9 Assisted Recombineering) Genome Editing wikipedia , lookup

Quantitative trait locus wikipedia , lookup

DNA damage theory of aging wikipedia , lookup

Nucleosome wikipedia , lookup

Genomics wikipedia , lookup

Nutriepigenomics wikipedia , lookup

Cancer epigenetics wikipedia , lookup

Cell-free fetal DNA wikipedia , lookup

Genome evolution wikipedia , lookup

Mutation wikipedia , lookup

Epigenomics wikipedia , lookup

Replisome wikipedia , lookup

Molecular cloning wikipedia , lookup

Nucleic acid analogue wikipedia , lookup

Genome (book) wikipedia , lookup

Nucleic acid double helix wikipedia , lookup

Genealogical DNA test wikipedia , lookup

Cre-Lox recombination wikipedia , lookup

Designer baby wikipedia , lookup

Site-specific recombinase technology wikipedia , lookup

DNA supercoil wikipedia , lookup

Vectors in gene therapy wikipedia , lookup

Primary transcript wikipedia , lookup

Gene wikipedia , lookup

Point mutation wikipedia , lookup

Therapeutic gene modulation wikipedia , lookup

Population genetics wikipedia , lookup

Non-coding DNA wikipedia , lookup

Extrachromosomal DNA wikipedia , lookup

Artificial gene synthesis wikipedia , lookup

Helitron (biology) wikipedia , lookup

Biology and consumer behaviour wikipedia , lookup

History of genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup

Deoxyribozyme wikipedia , lookup

Koinophilia wikipedia , lookup

Microevolution wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
LEARNING OBJECTIVES FOR BIOLOGY 243
This document outlines the learning objectives (what students will know, understand or
be able to do) after completing Biology 243. For some learning objectives, explicit
learning outcomes have been provided as well; these outcomes are specific, measureable
learning goals that illustrate one way in which students should be able to demonstrate
their knowledge.
I. LECTURE COMPONENT: CONSISTS OF FIVE THEMES:
THEME 1: WHAT IS EVOLUTION?
THEME 2: THE MOLECULAR BASIS OF INHERITANCE
THEME 3: DECODING GENETIC INFORMATION
THEME 4: TRANSMITTING GENES IN INDIVIDUALS AND POPULATIONS
THEME 5: PHYLOGENY, MACROEVOLUTION AND EVOLUTIONARY HISTORY
THEME 1: WHAT IS EVOLUTION?
A. Where does biological diversity come from?
B. What is evolution and how do we study it?
C. What are the required conditions for natural selection to occur?
D. Where did the idea of evolution by natural selection come from - what ideas does
it rely on?
E. Wallace: co-discoverer of natural selection - less detailed evidence for evolution
than Darwin
F. Lamarck: transmutation, species not fixed
G. Malthus: exponential population growth, constraint by resources
H. Lyell: ancient earth, uniformitarianism (using present processes to explain past)
Learning Objectives 1:
1. Define evolution as the change in allele frequencies over generations
2. Explain the process of evolution by natural selection in their own words
3. Link the importance of existing variation within a population to the process of
natural selection
4. Explain why heritable variation leading to differential fitness is essential for the
process of evolution
THEME 2: THE MOLECULAR BASIS OF INHERITANCE
A. DNA as information molecule
a. How do we know DNA is the information-carrying molecule?
b. Griffith
c. Avery, McLeod & McCarthy
d. Hershey & Chase
e. How do genes produce a phenotype?
1
B. DNA structure
a. How was DNA structure discovered?
b. What is DNA structure and how can it store information?
c. How is DNA arranged in cell, how does this differ in prokaryotes and
eukaryotes?
C. DNA replication
a. Establishing semi-conservative replication
b. How is DNA replicated in prokaryotes and eukaryotes?
Learning Objectives 2A:
1. Explain in your own words the results of the three classical experiments (Griffith;
Avery, McLeod & McCarthy; Hershey & Chase)
2. Explain how gene expression and protein expression produce a phenotype
3. Describe the benefits associated with a better understanding of genes and
genomes
4. Describe the structure of DNA
Learning Objectives 2B:
1. Explain how Watson and Crick combined their molecular modeling approach
with other sources of data to solve the structure of DNA
2. Describe the main differences between chromosomes in prokaryotic and
eukaryotic cells
3. Describe how chromatin is organized in eukaryotes and their effects on gene
expression
4. Explain the process of DNA replication
Learning Objectives 2C:
1. Explain in your own words the experiments that determined that DNA replication
is semiconservative
2. Explain the main steps and enzymes of DNA replication
3. Explain why lagging and leading strand synthesis occur at replication forks
4. Explain the replication end problem and the solution
THEME 3: DECODING GENETIC INFORMATION
A. Central Dogma
a. DNA encodes RNA, which encodes proteins
b. How do RNA viruses reproduce?
c. What are properties of information carrying molecule?
d. Not all DNA codes for proteins
B. Transcription
a. How are genes in DNA encoded into RNA?
b. How do cells with same DNA become different cell types?
c. How are genes modified during transcription?
d. How does transcription and posttranscriptional regulation differ in
prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms?
2
C. Translation
a. How are mRNAs translated into functional proteins?
b. How do the processes of translation differ in prokaryotic and eukaryotic
organisms?
D. Mutation
a. What happens when there is an error in a DNA sequence?
b. What kinds of errors can happen in DNA?
c. How do we determine the function of genes?
d. How do we characterize mutations?
Learning Objectives 3A:
1. Describe in your own worlds the genetic code and explain how it relates to the
central dogma
2. Explain how the auxotrophic mutants isolated by Beadle and Tatum support the
one gene-one polypeptide hypothesis
3. Describe template and coding strands and relate how genes are organized on both
DNA strands of a chromosome
4. Describe the orientation (5’-3’ or 3’-5’) of molecules in the central dogma
5. Describe the origin of the information system
Learning Objectives 3B:
1. Explain how different cells and tissues can form from an identical genome
2. Describe the main steps of transcription
3. Describe the structure and function of promoters and enhancers
4. Explain posttranscriptional regulation of gene expression
5. Explain how transcription is affected by chromatin structure
6. Explain how introns and exons are advantageous in eukaryotes
Learning Objectives 3C:
1. Explain what is the genetic code and describe the experiments that led to its
discovery
2. Understand the structure and role of rRNA and tRNA in translation
3. Distinguish between the E, P, and A sites of the ribosome
4. Compare and contrast the main steps of translation in prokaryotic cells and
eukaryotic cells
5. Know the basic structure of an amino acid and a peptide bond and be able to name
the types of amino acids and their main differences
Learning Objectives 3D:
1. Explain how mutations occur in the genome and the differences between
spontaneous and induced mutations and germline and somatic mutations
2. Explain how mutations can change the amino acid sequence of a polypeptide
3. Explain how creating mutants in genetic model systems can help us infer the
function of genes
4. Define alleles and describe the types of alleles and their effect on gene function
3
THEME 4: TRANSMITTING GENES IN INDIVIDUALS AND POPULATIONS
A. Mendelian inheritance
a. Review rules of probability
b. What did Mendel's experiments show?
c. What is dominance?
d. Testcrosses: how do we determine whether an individual is a dominant
heterozygote or a homozygote?
e. What are the exceptions to Mendelian dominance?
f. How do Mendel's factors relate to DNA?
g. Why do some traits appear to blend and others are discrete?
B. Population genetics and Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium
a. How do we know whether or not evolution is occurring in a population?
b. How do we test whether or not a population is in Hardy Weinberg
equilibrium?
c. Under what conditions do we expect to find populations to be in HWE?
d. How realistic are the assumptions of HWE?
C. Selection, species and speciation
a. What types of natural selection exist?
b. How can selection operate in ways that seem maladaptive?
c. What non-selective forces can act in evolution?
d. How do we define and recognize species?
e. How do new species form?
Learning Objectives 4A:
1. Explain what alleles and genes are, and how their expression results in different
phenotypes
2. Explain how meiosis determines the frequency and genotype of gametes of
homozygous and heterozygous individuals
3. Explain Mendel’s genetic crosses (monohybrid cross and test cross) and the
associated genotypic and phenotypic ratios
4. Explain the difference between dominant and recessive alleles
5. Explain the difference between incomplete dominance and co-dominance and
how these affect phenotypic ratios
Learning Objectives 4B:
1. Describe the difference between discrete and continuous traits
2. Be able to calculate allele and genotype frequencies for a population
3. Be able to explain why HWE is a null hypothesis for evolutionary change
4. Understand how to apply the Hardy-Weinberg equation and Chi-square test to test
whether populations appear to be in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium
5. Be able to use Hardy-Weinberg equation to predict genotype frequencies for
populations assumed to be in equilibrium
6. Describe in their own words the major assumptions of Hardy-Weinberg
equilibrium and how violations of assumptions affect testing for HWE
4
Learning Objectives 4C:
1. Distinguish the general differences between balancing, directional and stabilizing
selection
2. Explain what sexual selection is
3. Explain Bateman’s Principle
4. Explain what drift and inbreeding are and why they are more important in small
populations
5. Describe the major forms of reproductive isolation and modes of speciation
6. Describe the Biological Species Concept and distinguish it from the
Morphological Species Concept
THEME 5: PHYLOGENY, MACROEVOLUTION AND EVOLUTIONARY HISTORY
A. Phylogeny
a. How to read a phylogeny
b. How phylogenies are inferred and the principle of parsimony
c. How do we determine which traits are ancestral and which are derived?
d. How do we map phylogenetic trees onto taxonomic classification?
e. Monophyletic, paraphyletic and polyphyletic groups
f. How can we use phylogenies to answer evolutionary questions?
B. Macroevolution
a. What is macroevolution, and how does it differ from microevolution?
b. What are adaptive radiations?
c. Anagenesis and cladogenesis
d. Is evolution always gradual?
e. How can major morphological changes occur?
C. History of Life
a. How old is Earth, and how do we know?
b. How did life originate on Earth?
c. Extinction and mass extinction, why are they important in evolution?
d. Major events: first prokaryotic cells, first eukaryotes, endosymbiosis,
multicellurarity, Great oxygenation event, Cambrian explosion, transition
to land
Learning Objectives 5A:
1. Be able to explain in own words homology and the principle of parsimony
2. Compare and contrast homology and homoplasy
3. Describe the steps and techniques used in inferring phylogenies based on a set of
data
4. Understand relationships between groups of species inferred by a given
phylogeny
5. Be able to recognize a monophyletic group, paraphyletic group, polyphyletic
group
5
Learning Objectives 5B:
1. Distinguish between microevolution and macroevolution
2. Distinguish between anagenesis and cladogenesis and relate these processes to the
patterns of phyletic gradualism and punctuated equilibrium
3. Define an adaptive radiation
Learning Objectives 5C:
1. Describe the main hypotheses for the origin of biological molecules
2. Describe the Urey-Miller experiments and their significance
3. Explain in their own words the ecological importance of the shift to an oxygen
atmosphere, and the reasons for the slow rise of oxygen
4. Describe the Cambrian Explosion and the features of ancestral metazoans
5. Describe the timing of major events of the history of life (oxygenation,
multicellularity, Cambrian explosion, invasion of land, origin of seeds, Great
Dying)
6. Explain the criteria used to define mass extinctions, describe the pattern of mass
extinctions in the fossil record, and explain in their own words the evolutionary
importance of mass extinctions
II. LABORATORY COMPONENT
Learning Objectives (skills)
1. Generate a null hypothesis for a study
2. Create a flowchart to summarize an experimental procedure
3. Use summary statistics in statistical tests (Chi-square test and t-test) to decide
whether or not to reject a null hypothesis
4. Write a discussion section including references to the scientific literature,
including literature cited section and appendix containing summary of statistics
5. Create a phylogenetic data set and use it to generate a phylogenetic hypothesis
6. Use sterile technique in plating organisms
7. Transform bacteria using plasmids
8. Read primary scientific literature and summarize information presented
Specific topics (may change in future)
1. DNA extraction and DNA structure
2. Recognizing stages of mitosis, testing effects of caffeine on meiosis
3. Identify stages of meiosis
4. Testing effects of UV radiation on mutation rate and cell survival
5. Genetic engineering using plasmids
6. Mendelian genetics of corn
7. Testing for the occurrence of evolution using Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium
8. Natural selection: salinity tolerance in bacterial populations
9. Variation and natural selection simulations in snails
10. Phylogenetic analysis: building phylogenetic trees
6