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521-305 Biochemistry of Metabolism and Nutrition | |
Credit Points | 12.5 |
Coordinator | Dr D L Ebert |
Prerequisites | Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 521-211, 212 and 521-221, or 521-024, or (pre 1997) 521-201 and 521-202. In special circumstances, the Head of the Department may permit some students who have not taken 521-221 (pre 1997 521-202) to enrol in this subject. |
Semester | 1 (view timetable) |
Contact | 36 lectures (three a week) |
Subject Description | By the end of the subject the student should understand the relationships between nutrients, vitamins and the metabolic processes of the typical mammal, metabolic integration and homeostasis, metabolic basis of adaptive responses to a variety of dietary, hormonal and environmental factors, the physiological and biochemical processes governing muscle protein metabolism and its regulation, the regulation of lipoprotein gene expression, and lipid metabolism and transport mechanisms in normal and diseased states. Subject content includes: Overview of whole animal nutrition and metabolism including tissue specialisation; adaptive responses and the molecular basis for regulation of enzymes, nutrient carrier proteins and relevant cell receptors; mechanism of action of lipid soluble vitamins; integrated aspects of carbohydrate, lipid and protein/amino acid metabolism; energy-transducing membranes and modern concepts of bioenergetics; ion pumps and their regulation; regulation of muscle protein metabolism in response to endurance training, excessive feeding, starvation, physical trauma, and related endocrine (hormonal) and other clinical diseases; regulation of muscle protein gene expression; the biochemical basis of anabolic drugs; dietary fate of lipids, lipid transport mechanisms and the regulation of lipoprotein gene expression and metabolism; biochemical basis of obesity and cardiovascular disease and related nutritional problems, as well as adaptive responses to excessive consumption of alcohol. |
Assessment | A 2.5 hour end-of-semester written examination (80%) plus one short oral and two written assignments during the semester (20%). |
Prescribed Texts | Lecture handouts and a list of specific textbooks and other references will be made available at the beginning of the course. |
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Status: Official 1999 Last Modified: Tuesday October 20 11:52 SGML to HTML Conversion: Information Technology Services Authorised by: Academic Registrar Email Enquiries: Course_Information@registrar.unimelb.edu.au