Schleif's Portion of Graduate Biophysical Chemistry
This is an advanced course for graduate students in the biological sciences, although undergraduate students are welcome, that stresses the fundamentals and analysis of biological systems.
Schleif's portion of the course is very loosely based on the following text: "Genetics and Molecular Biology, second Ed." Robert Schleif, Johns Hopkins Press. Amazon.com has some used copies, or you can download, read, and print your own copy from the link to the pdf file
for the entire book, Genetics
and Molecular Biology 2nd Ed..
Haiku "summarizing" the mol. bio. portion of course.
Ikenna Okafor
Biophysical Wit
Promoting molecular
Estimations. Lit
Danny Duckworth
a key driving force
the entropy of water
the answer to all
Daria Naumova
Try to solve problems
with lac or AraC, hope
experiments work.
Mat Hurlock
Brownian motion
Nucleotides wrap a cell
Exams invoke thought
Michelle Biederman
Old exams tag cloud
Not as helpful as I thought
What should I study?
Josh Blundon
Supercoiling is
Positive and Negative
DNA Structure
Amanda Ray
Particles moving
Random motion with proteins
How do we find out?
Justin Gray
Alpha-helix curve
Protein translation, folding,
Test question, confused
Gabby Vidaurre
what is the number
of ribosomes in a cell?
approximate it
Xiaoyi Li
Cell volume finite
Combinations infinite
possibilities
Anthony Mclean
Function follows form.
Expression rates reliant
On conformation.
Revised April/2018