MCB 3895: UConn SWI Learning Goals
- Know the three domains of life, how they are related, and examples of each domain.
- Be able to draw Gram-positive and Gram-negative prokaryotic cells, and know the structure and function of key parts.
- Know shared features and differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes.
- Know molecular properties of the 4 biomolecules of life.
- Be able to explain the basis for specificity at a molecular level
- Understand the nature of covalent and non-covalent chemical bonds and their roles in protein structure.
- Be able to describe the properties of lipid membranes and the proteins in them.
- Understand the difference between passive and energy-requiring cellular events and how both are accomplished by a cell.
- Be able to explain the relationship among enzymes, active sites, substrates, cofactors, inhibitors, and reaction products.
- Know how oxidation/reduction reactions drive the energy production in bacteria.
- Know how information flows in a cell (in the process of gene expression) starting with the information encoded within a gene (central dogma).
- Explain the mechanism of DNA replication, transcription and translation.
- Identify similarities between transcription, translation and DNA replication (in terms of where in the cell they occur, when and how they occur.
- Articulate the role of base pairing in nucleic acid replication, transcription, and translation?
- Be able to explain the mechanism of the translation process and the specific role of key molecules (DNA, mRNA, rRNA, tRNA, microRNA, amino acids, ribosomes).
- Distinguish key ways in which gene expression differs in prokaryotes vs. eukaryotes (e.g. gene organization, processing, location of events).
- Be able to predict the effects of various classes of mutations on mRNA production, polypeptide levels and activity.
- Be able to navigate the various sections of a scientific journal article to locate relevant information.
- Define genome, metagenome, and transcriptome.
- Be able to explain the basis for building a molecular phylogenetic tree
- Explain why the ribosomal 16S gene is a good “marker” for molecular phylogenetic analyses.
- Be able to distinguish and explain the three mechanisms of horizontal gene transfer (conjugation, transformation, transduction).
- Be able to explain why horizontal gene transfer can speed up the evolution of antibiotic resistance relative to spread of resistance gained through vertical transfer of mutation.
- Explain the origins of mitochondria and chloroplasts and the evidence that supports this theory.
- Describe natural selection
- Explain how organisms acquire adaptive traits through random mutation rather than in response to the selective agent in the environment.
- Be able to refute the notion that people become resistant to antibiotics through increased use.