415.671.92
Developmental Biology and Human Malformations II
Location
NIH - Bethesda, MD
Term
2nd Term
Department
Health, Behavior and Society
Credit(s)
1
Academic Year
2019 - 2020
Instruction Method
TBD
Wednesday, 5:30 - 6:30pm
Auditors Allowed
No
Available to Undergraduate
No
Grading Restriction
Letter Grade or Pass/Fail
Course Instructor(s)
Leslie Biesecker
Contact Name
Frequency Schedule
Every Other Year
Resources
Familiarizes students with modern developmental biology and the use of this knowledge to understand common human malformations. Includes lectures on the methodology and model systems of developmental biology; a review of preimplantation development and gastrulation, and embryogensis/organogensis. Subsequent lectures focus on the development of organ systems.
Learning Objectives
Upon successfully completing this course, students will be able to:
- Explain the different ways to analyze birth defects: analytically, embryologically, and by developmental biological analysis
- Describe the basic stages of development: preimplantation, gastrulation, organogenesis, and fetal growth
- Describe the basic genetic molecular control mechanisms of development
- Describe the basic concept of evolutionary conservation of ontogeny
- Define the concepts of homologous genes and structures
- Describe the mechanism of laterality determination in vertebrates
- Analyze a congenital anomaly including the embryology and developmental biology of the genesis of the abnormality using sources including appropriate textbooks, journal articles and online resources
Jointly Offered With