- Offerta formativa A.A. 2017/2018
- Master's Degree in MEDICAL BIOTECHNOLOGY AND NANOBIOTECHNOLOGY
- BIOPHYSICS AND CHEMICAL-PHYSICAL METHODS FOR BIOTECHNOLOGIES
- BIOPHYSICS
BIOPHYSICS
- Teaching in italian
- BIOPHYSICS
- Teaching
- BIOPHYSICS
- Subject area
- BIO/09
- Reference degree course
- MEDICAL BIOTECHNOLOGY AND NANOBIOTECHNOLOGY
- Course type
- Master's Degree
- Credits
- 6.0
- Teaching hours
- Frontal Hours: 50.0
- Academic year
- 2017/2018
- Year taught
- 2018/2019
- Course year
- 2
- Language
- ENGLISH
- Curriculum
- NANOBIOTECNOLOGICO
- Reference professor for teaching
- VERRI Tiziano
Teaching description
No formal prerequisites are required with respect to other courses. However, basic knowledge of general physics, physical chemistry and general physiology is recommended.
This course deals with the basic theoretical physics underlying biological phenomena, with emphasis on those occurring at the membrane level. From the broad axiom that in biological systems ‘a barrier separates two-compartments’ it focuses on the processes that allow a particle (ion, small molecule, protein, nanoparticle, …) to cross the membrane and on how it does interact with water (solvent) and soluble components (solutes) in each compartment. It also focuses on those biophysical phenomena that make a membrane ‘active’, i.e. that allow a biological membrane to produce and transmit a signal from a compartment to the other and/or along the barrier. In this respect, it explores the molecular foundations of biophysics, the thermodynamics of non-equilibrium systems and membrane transport, with emphasis on nerve impulses, and membrane transduction, with emphasis on membrane receptor-based processes.
The course begins with an overview of molecular biophysics and the concept of molecular recognition, followed by a discussion of the interaction between molecules, the primary process that determines membrane transport and reception, and the importance of intercellular interactions in the existence and development of multicellular organisms.
The student is also introduced to the stability conditions of a steady-state, the concept of entropy for an open system, the thermodynamics of the sodium-potassium pump, ionic equilibrium between sodium- and potassium-rich solutions separated by an active membrane, the conformational properties of membranes, and the general phenomenological theory of active, facilitated and passive transport and the role of the carriers and channels.
The structure-function relationships that allow channels and carriers, on one side, and receptors, on the other, to operate efficaciously in the membrane are discussed on the basis of the most recent structural data available in protein databanks.
This course is a valuable resource for biologists and biotechnologists, physicists and biophysicists, graduate and postgraduate students having basic knowledge of physics, and anyone acquainted with biological membranes and proteins.
Course outline and aims
This course aims at providing students with an in-depth knowledge of the current view of membrane biophysics, the role as a barrier played by the membrane and the roles played by channels, carriers and receptors in the membrane physiology. The course also aims at highlighting the spatial organization of membrane proteins, their structures and how their major structural elements make them work efficiently. Major methodological approaches to membrane biophysics including their powers and limitations will be also discussed.
Learning outcomes
Knowledge to be attained:
Molecular foundations of biophysics
- the subject matter of molecular biophysics
- molecular recognition
- molecule-molecule interaction
- reception
- intercellular interactions
The thermodynamics of non-equilibrium systems
- the dissipation function
- the coupling of chemical reactions
- the steady-state of a linear system
- the coupling of chemical reactions with diffusion processes
- processes remote from equilibrium
- entropy
- entropy and information in biology
Membrane transport
- cell membranes
- the thermodynamics of passive membrane transport
- the thermodynamics of active membrane transport
- the thermodynamic model of the sodium-potassium pump
- the model theory of passive membrane transport
- the model theory of active membrane transport
- the structure of membranes
- the conformational properties of membranes
- induced ion transport
Nerve impulses
- axons and nerve impulses
- propagation of the nerve impulse
- generation of the impulse
- activation and inactivation of sodium conductivity
- synaptic transmission
Abilities to be attained:
- Methods, protocols and equations to study membrane biophysics and membrane protein functioning
- Protein databank querying and consulting
Learning methods consist of formal lectures and integrative lectures held using slides and hypertext links to specific Web sites (5 credits = 40 hours), followed by practical laboratory classes (1 credit = 10 hours). Outside these activities, the students are expected to read assigned papers from the scientific literature.
Oral examination. It is aimed at ascertaining, in proportion:
- The level of theoretical knowledge through the presentation of the program topics (50%)
- The level of practical abilities through description of methods and methodologies (20%)
- The ability to apply theoretical knowledge and practical skills to solve simple problems (30%)
Cell Physiology Source Book 4th Edition. Essentials of Membrane Biophysics. Editors: Nicholas Sperelakis. Hardcover ISBN: 9780123877383. eBook ISBN: 9780123877574. Imprint: Academic Press. Published Date: 28th December 2011
Semester
First Semester (dal 01/10/2018 al 11/01/2019)
Exam type
Type of assessment
Oral
Course timetable
https://easyroom.unisalento.it/Orario
Parent teaching
BIOPHYSICS AND CHEMICAL-PHYSICAL METHODS FOR BIOTECHNOLOGIES (LM49)