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Molecular Biology - Part 2: Transcription and Transposition

Strengthen your scientific thinking and experimental design skills in this adventure through transcription and transposition.

Molecular Biology - Part 2: Transcription and Transposition

Strengthen your scientific thinking and experimental design skills in this adventure through transcription and transposition.

In Part 2 of this Molecular Biology course, you’ll explore transcription of DNA to RNA, a key part of the central dogma of biology and the first step of gene expression.

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Did you know that transposable elements, the genetic information that can move from location to location, make up roughly 50% of the human genome? Did you know that scientists have linked their movement into specific genes to the causes of certain diseases? You’ll also learn how these “jumping genes” work and how scientists study them in Molecular Biology: Transcription and Transposition.

Are you ready to go beyond the “what" of scientific information presented in textbooks and explore how scientists deduce the details of these molecular models?

Take a behind-the-scenes look at modern molecular genetics, from the classic experimental events that identified the proteins and elements involved in transcription and transposition to cutting-edge assays that apply the power of genome sequencing. We've designed the problems in this course to build your experimental design and data analysis skills.

Let’s explore the limits of our current knowledge about the transcription machinery and mechanisms of transposition. If you are up for the challenge, join us in 7.28.2x Molecular Biology: Transcription and Transposition.

What you'll learn

  • How to compare and contrast transcription in prokaryotes and eukaryotes
  • How to describe several mechanisms of transposition
  • How to analyze protein structures to infer functional information
  • How to design the best experiment to test a hypothesis
  • How to interpret data from transcription and transposition experiments

Prerequisites

7.00x Introduction to Biology or similar (undergraduate biochemistry, molecular biology, and genetics) and 7.28.1x Molecular Biology or similar (advanced DNA replication and repair)

Meet your instructors

  • Featured image for Tania Baker
    HHMI Investigator; Whitehead Professor of Biology at MIT
  • Featured image for Stephen Bell
    HHMI Investigator; Professor of Biology at MIT
  • Featured image for Mary Ellen Wiltrout
    Director of Blended and Online Initiatives; Lecturer, Department of Biology
  • Featured image for Nathaniel Schafheimer
    MITx Digital Learning Fellow, Department of Biology
  • Featured image for Sera Thornton
    MITx Digital Learning Fellow, Department of Biology

Who can take this course?

Because of U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) restrictions and other U.S. federal regulations, learners residing in one or more of the following countries or regions will not be able to register for this course: Iran, Cuba, Syria, North Korea and the Crimea, Donetsk People's Republic and Luhansk People's Republic regions of Ukraine.