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Course Information Physics 498Bio Introduction to Biological Physics You’ve (hopefully) made a good choice! Prerequisites Physics 111, 112 (or equivalent) Some knowledge of Statistical Mechanics Gibb’s Free Energy, entropy: G = H-TS Boltzmann’s Constant, kB Boltzmann Factor: exp(-E/kT) i ATP: Adenosine TriPhosphate (universal energy currency) (Remember in useful units: [k T = 4 pN-nm; ATP = 80-100 pN-nm ~ 25 kT]) B Some elementary calculus. No previous biology assumed. I teach it in course. Required Reading Essential Cell Biology, 3rd edition: by Bruce Alberts et al. Excellent introduction to biology. Chpt 1-5, 11-13 Read Chpt 1: Quiz next Wednesday. Need to know biology in order to do biophysics! Using physics to understand biology! Not biology to understand physics! Goals of course 1. Learn some basic molecular biology. Language of Life: 4 key components DNA (PCR, sequencing) Proteins... can do everything! 2. Learn how to apply basic physics to biology. Mechanics, Electricity & Light, Statistical Mechanics (Example today – What planets are life possible on?) 3. Learn about/type problems biophysicists work on. Biology... Molecular motors (chemical mechanical) Ion Channels (chemical Ion Gradients electrical) [Photosynthesis (light electricalchemical energy)] Stochastic Nature of gene expression, Magnetic Navigation, Vision... 4. Learn“back of the envelope”type calculations. Example today: Strength of animals 5. Learn experimental (bio)physics How to measure (nm distances, pN forces), Single molecules (Fluorescence, Optical Tweezers Magnetic Traps, Patch Clamp Techniques) Some guest lecturers– people doing the stuff! Klaus Schulten How do birds know which way is North? In singulo Biophysics Single molecules, single cells, single species, single planets… Heterogeneity is the norm Men vs. women: height, sex organs Important to understand (prostate cancer, ovarian cancer It is only in last 10 (20) years that single molecule detection has been possible! Course Schedule DNA (& Proteins…) 1) Jan. 20th : Intro; King Kong; Temp. of Earth; Evolution & Modern Biology 2) Jan 25th : Central Dogma of Biology; Partition Function 3) Jan 27th : The 4 class of macromolecules; Entropy 4) Feb 1st : DNA Technology : FISH, PCR, Forensics 5) Feb 3rd : DNA Technology : Gene Chips th 6) Feb 8 : DNA as Spaghetti: Magnetic Traps th 7) Feb 10 : Magnetic Traps, Part II th 8) Feb 15 : Carbohydrates and Lipids Fluorescence th 9) Feb 17 : ATPase Operates at near 100% Efficiency nd 10) Feb 22 : [I’m gone]: Alternative make-up day? 11) Feb 24th : Microscopes and Resolution; X-ray Diffraction 12) March 1st : Super-Accuracy, Super-resolution techniques: FIONA, SHREC, 13) March 3rd : More super-accuracy: PALM, STORM 14) March 8th : STED, FRET, Part I 15) March 10th : FRET Part II and DNA helicase—TJ Ha’s Science magazine article. Students Teach! 16) March 15th : Student Presentations 17) March 17th : Student Presentations March (22, 24) Vacation Optical Traps allow you to see Angstrom & Nanometer distance. 18) March 29th : Optical Traps- theory and Experiment 19) March 31st : Optical traps, Part II Diffusion: Inertia doesn’t mean anything! Diffusion and Bacteria Moving 20) April 5th :How E. coli swim and tread water Diffusion: Inertia doesn't mean anything th 21) April 7 :Magnetic Orientation? Klaus Schulten. Vision & Ion Channels 22) April 12th : Ion Channels – Voltage-sensitve (nerves, neuromuscular) 23) April 14th : Ion Channels – Ligand sensitive (your brain) 24) April 19th : Vision Single Cells: Most Genes are few in Number—some surprising results 25) April 21st : Studying Gene Activity in Individual Cells. 26) April 26th : Gene Activity Part II Students Teach! 27) May 3rd : Student Presentation 28) May 5th : Students Presentation Grading 30%: Homework (Must do all of them): Mostly weekly assignments, but occasionally to write up something Work together, but turn in separately. Hand in at start of class– in class! (Do not be late.) 25% Mid-term Oral and written report Oral & Written—the same subject -- 12.5% on written report: 8 pg report. -- 12.5% on oral report: 10-12 min plus 3-5 min for questions. 25%: Final Written Project & Oral Project– Same topic -- 12.5% on written report: 10 pg report. -- 12.5% on oral report: 10-12 min plus 3-5 min for questions. No regular mid-term or final exams. 10% Quizzes (~1% on each) --5 min quizzes making sure that you’ve done readings 10% on classroom participation /class evaluation
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