39286 - Systemic Clinical Biochemistry

Academic Year 2017/2018

  • Docente: Stefano Iotti
  • Credits: 3
  • SSD: BIO/12
  • Language: Italian
  • Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
  • Campus: Bologna
  • Corso: First cycle degree programme (L) in Biomedical Laboratory techniques (cod. 8484)

Learning outcomes

The student will achive a a detailed knowledge of the regulation of the biochemical processes in different tissues (liver, muscle, brain) together with a general overview of the main biochemical deficits generating metabolic diseases in different tissues.

Course contents

Sistematic Biochemistry

Liver. Functions and metabolic flexibility. Bile acids. Glucidic metabolism. Lipid metabolism. Protein metabolism. Detossification of xenobiotics. Protection from Oxidative damage. Ethanol metabolism.

Muscle. Contractile and regulatory proteins. Muscle contraction. Ionic channel. Calcium fluxes. Skeletal and cardiac muscle metabolism. Bioenergetics: system of energy buffers "phosphocreatine shuttle" model.

Brain. Biochemistry of the transmission of the nerve impulses. Synaptic transmission. Ectopic neurotransmission. Ephaptic coupling of cortical neurons. post-synaèptic receptors. GABA and Glutamic acid. NO and long term potentiation.

Tisuses homeostasis.

Regolatory mechanisms of tissues homeostasis. Regulation of transcription factors function. Hormones. Membrane receptors. Proteine kinases and signal transduction. G proteins.  

Readings/Bibliography

Biochimica Sistematica Umana

C.M. Caldarera

CLUEB

 Fondamenti di Biochimica

D. Voet

J. Voet

C. W. Pratt

ZANICHELLI

Teaching methods

frontal lessons

Assessment methods

written test with multiple choice questions

Teaching tools

Teaching material such as slides, animations, films used during lessons will be made available to studens on line. The printable material should be taken by the student to class.

The teaching material can be dowloaded at  http://campus.unibo.it/ 

Username and password are assigned to students regularly registered at the University of Bologna

Office hours

See the website of Stefano Iotti