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Construction and Deconstruction: Comprehensive Research Programs for the early Undergraduate IRACDA, Baylor Houston. 06/20/11 Utpal Banerjee Depts of Mol. Cell & Devl. Biol.; Biological Chemistry; Broad Stem Cell Research Center UCLA with Construction: Large numbers of small observations Construction Deconstruction A comprehensive inquiry-based teaching program for Undergraduates at UCLA Ira Clark, John Olson, Rafael Romero & Utpal Banerjee How can we best prepare our students for careers in science? Can we make research a core part of the science curriculum? Our Motto You don’t need to be a physicist to know how to ride a bike Start research early. 1st and 2nd years URCFG – “hands-on” research (75 students/yr) Research Deconstruction (300 students/yr) UCLA Minor in Biomedical Research Our programs have provided research instruction to over 1200 students We now instruct over 300 new students each year. UCLA Undergraduate Research Consortium for Functional Genomics Sponsored by a grant from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute Professors Program 560 students have participated in the Introductory Program so far. Multifaceted Approach •Didactic –Ethics, career options, grant and manuscript writing, bioinformatics, record keeping •Laboratory –“Fly pushing” techniques, time management, lab notebook •Computer –Bioinformatics tools •Writing –Grant proposal, Final paper One Central Difficult Concept Mitotic recombination as a functional genomics tool Genome-wide expressionbased lineage analysis Post-transcriptional gene silencing as a tool for functional genomics Discipline at the Bench •5-generation crossing scheme •Each student performs for 10 stocks •Documents eye phenotype Real Data Generated Introductory Program Details • 2650 Separate introductory experiments performed • >120,000 Drosophila crosses performed • 2159 Mutant stocks used • 1375 Published stocks • 379 X-Chromosome stocks used • 1576 Verified phenotypes • 1523 Verification experiments performed • 642 Excision experiments performed The Great Ball of Toil Our First Publication 134 undergraduate authors Our Publication in the October 2007 issue of Genetics With 264 undergraduate authors Lineage Tracing Project Genome-wide expression-based lineage analysis The G-TRACE System: Developed and Characterized by a number of undergraduates in our advanced program Nature Methods http://mcdb.ucla.edu/Research/Banerjee/LineageTracing Summary of lineage tracing project • 700 gal4 lines analyzed and documented for expression patterns and cell lineage • Over 30,000 digital images recorded • An annotated Online database is being developed • Student that participate in the introductory program are eligible to apply for the Minor in Biomedical Research Classroom Undergraduate Research Experience Survey (CURE) Dave Lopatto – Grinnell University 1st and 2nd years URCFG – “hands-on” research (75 students/yr) Research Deconstruction (300 students/yr) UCLA Minor in Biomedical Research How can we scale up our efforts to immerse early-stage undergraduates in research? “Deconstructing” scientific research – a practical and scalable pedagogical tool to provide evidence-based science instruction Ira E. Clark1,4, Rafael Romero-Calderón1,4, John M. Olson1, Leslie Jaworski2, David Lopatto2 and Utpal Banerjee1.3,5 PLoS Biology (Dec. 2009) Science instruction through research deconstruction Teaching science through the scientific story Up to 90 students / class – mostly 1st and 2nd-years Full-scale research seminars by invited UCLA faculty Seminars videotaped and placed on website with copy of slides for students to review “Deconstruction” classes use segments of seminar to teach fundamental concepts and experimental approaches. Q&A session with speaker at end of series Multiple layers of instruction from deconstruction Seminar Tim Lane – Wnt signaling and breast cancer In this example of enhanced deconstruction, a research paper was deconstructed along with the seminar. Students follow the scientific story as it unfolds. Wnt10b overexpression causes mammary tumors (mouse model) Wnt10b causes decrease in cell cycle inhibitor p27 (protein, not RNA) proteasome-dependent non-canonical E3 ubiquitin ligase (i.e. not SCFSkp2) candidate E3 ligase components ID’d among Wnt10b transcriptional targets Along the way, we discuss fundamental scientific concepts. cancer biology signal transduction - Wnt pathway cell cycle - Cyclins, Cdks and Cdk inhibitors ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis They also learn important techniques and how to design experiments properly. transgenic mice Immunostaining (genetic controls) tissue culture RT-PCR (reference RNAs) Western blots RNAi (loading controls) (controls for off-target effects) microarrays coimmunoprecipitation And they learn how to interpret experimental data. Invited speakers for deconstruction courses stem cell biology Utpal Banerjee Hanna Mikkola Kathrin Plath Volker Hartenstein Amander Clark April Pyle Yi Sun cell biology Greg Payne Rachelle Crosbie Margot Quinlan David Walker Alex van der Bliek James Wohlschlegel cancer biology Tim Lane Paul Mischel Heather Christofk development Eddy De Robertis Luisa Iruela-Arispe Alvaro Sagasti Karen Lyons Cory Evans neurobiology Larry Zipursky Kelsey Martin Art Arnold Stephanie White David Krantz Patricia Phelps Ellen Carpenter Debora Farber Fernando Gomez-Pinilla gene regulation Arnie Berk Doug Black Susan Krum immunology Owen Witte Steve Smale Linda Demer signaling Gerry Weinmaster Fuyu Tamanoi John Colicelli microbiology Benhur Lee Patricia Johnson Beth Lazazzera Students learn important concepts such as the role of supporting evidence and the process of research Clark et al. (2009) PLoS Biology Data collected by David Lopatto (Grinnell College) Learning gains from research deconstruction Clark et al. (2009) PLoS Biology Advantages to research deconstruction Easily exported – limited resource requirements Scalable – can accommodate large class sizes Adaptable to multiple research disciplines “Works in Hebrew!” Benny Shilo, Weizmann Inst. New approach for general education? 1st and 2nd years URCFG – Research Construction (75 students/yr) Research Deconstruction (300 students/yr) UCLA Minor in Biomedical Research The UCLA Minor in Biomedical Research 1. Early recruitment and training. 2. Lab placement for extensive research commitment (at least 4 quarters). 3. Research training courses. 4. Integration of social sciences and humanities. A Faculty Advisory Committee helps to set policy, evaluate applicants and suggest lab placement. Utpal Banerjee (Director) – Molecular, Cell and Developmental Biology Michael Carey – Biological Chemistry Ellen Carpenter – Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences John Colicelli – Biological Chemistry Albert Courey – Chemistry and Biochemistry Soraya de Chadarevian – History Center for Society and Genetics Frank Laski – Molecular, Cell and Developmental Biology Aldons J. Lusis – Human Genetics Kelsey Martin – Biological Chemistry/ Psych. and Biobehavioral Sci. Co-Director of UCLA Medical Science Training Program Jeffery F. Miller – Microbiology, Immunology and Molecular Genetics Dwayne Simmons – Physiological Science, Director of MARC Stephen Smale – Microbiology, Immunology and Molecular Genetics Co-Director of UCLA Medical Science Training Program Yi Sun – Mol. and Med. Pharmacology/ Psych. and Biobehavioral Sci. Hong Wu – Molecular and Medical Pharmacology The Minor in Biomedical was launched in Spring 2007. It has now provided research training to over 190 students in over 100 laboratories at UCLA. www.biomedresearchminor.ucla.edu Publication-quality research 32 publications by students in the Minor in first four years of program - 26 student authors - 3 first-author papers - top journals, including: Developmental Cell Cell Stem Cell Nature Methods Current Biology J. Neuroscience J. Bacteriology J. Biol. Chemistry Developmental Biology Blood Early returns from the Minor show that graduates continue in top programs in basic or health sciences. MD-PhD UCLA Harvard/MIT Northwestern U. Iowa U. Penn UNC Case Western PhD U. Wash. UCLA Harvard U. Mich. Cornell U. Wisc. Yale USC UC Irvine UC Berkeley MD PharmD UCSF UCLA UCSD Stanford UC Irvine MS UCSD KAUST Dartmouth Georgetown UT Houston UCLA Cleveland Clinic Wash. U. Research assistants (16) - UCLA, Cedar Sinai, NIH, Harvard, Stanford, Northwestern 1 Gilliam Fellow 1 Fulbright Award Challenges and advantages of building a program at UCLA Large public university – over 36,000 students Large research community – 400 life science labs Medical school adjacent to college campus; faculty active in undergraduate education. Synopsis Freshmen or Sophomores (mostly) “Deconstructing Research” Class Self directed Undergraduate Consortium in Functional Genomics UCLA Minor in Biomedical Research At capacity expect 200 students Self directed Acknowledgements Ira Clark; John Olson; Rafael Romero Jiong Chen Gerald Call Allison Yabroff TA: Nikki Villarasa; Francie Diep; Dan Huynh Advisory Council for Minor Cory Evans Raghavendra Nagaraj Admin: Nancy Purtill Hillary Howard Deans Reisler, Eiserling Provost Smith HHMI Professors Award and HHMI Institutional Grant For more information, visit www.biomedresearchminor.ucla.edu and www.bruinfly.ucla.edu