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Graduate course list
- LMP1001/1002/1003: Graduate Seminars in Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology
- LMP1005H: Fundamentals of Research Practice
- LMP1100H: Cellular imaging in pathobiology
- LMP1101H: Basic concepts in inflammatory/autoimmune arthritis
- LMP1102H: Clinical concepts in inflammatory/autoimmune arthritis
- LMP1103H: Tissue injury, repair and regeneration
- LMP1105: Current understanding of Atherosclerosis
- LMP1106H: Molecular Biology Techniques
- LMP1107H: Bioinformatics in LMP
- LMP1108H: Genome analysis in medicine
- LMP1110H: Neural Stem Cells - brain development and maintenance
- LMP1111: Introduction to R and the Analysis of Single Cell Data
- LMP1200H: Neoplasia
- LMP1203H: Basic principles of analytical clinical biochemistry
- LMP1206H: Next generation genomics in clinical medicine
- LMP1207H: Mass spectrometry, proteomics and their clinical applications
- LMP1208H: Molecular clinical microbiology and infectious diseases
- LMP1210H - Basic Principles of Machine Learning in Biomedical Research
- LMP1211H: Foundations in Musculoskeletal Science
- LMP2004H: Introduction to Biostatistics
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- Program completion for MSc and PhD
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- Communicate your research: the 3MT in LMP
- Mentoring & professional development for graduate students
- Master of Health Science (MHSc) in Laboratory Medicine
- Master of Science in Applied Computing (MScAC) Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare
- Collaborative Specialization in Musculoskeletal Sciences (CSMS)
- Master of Health Science (MHSc) in Translational Research
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- LMP1200H: Neoplasia
LMP1200H: Neoplasia
Who can attend
MSc or PhD students with background in molecular biology, cell biology and/or biochemistry.
Course description
This is an advanced, seminar-based course designed to provide an in-depth examination of the molecular and cellular mechanisms that contribute to malignant transformation.
The objective of the course is to improve your analytical and critical thinking skills and to establish an understanding of the interplay of metabolism, epigenetics and tumorigenesis.
Topics will include:
- include the role of chromatin regulatory mechanisms that impact tumor cancer stemness;
- moonlighting function of metabolic enzymes that reshape cancer cell status and modulate chromatin modifications, transcriptional activities and signal transduction;
- characterization of molecular links between obesity/diabetes and cancer progression and discussion of genome wide technologies yielding new insights towards cancer therapeutic intervention.
Structure
This class is structured as a journal club.
Each week a paper will be presented by one student.
If you are not presenting, you are expected to contribute to the discussions of each paper.
Course coordinator
adcock.maria@gmail.com
lmp.grad@utoronto.ca for administrative queries.
Timings and location
This course is offered in the Winter term.
Thursdays, 10:30 am - 1:00 pm.
Location: MS 2290
Evaluation methods
Oral presentations of assigned papers (50%)
Original scientific papers from selected areas will be used for student presentations and discussions. During the course, each student will present two original papers with each presentation being assessed by coordinator.
Participation in discussions (20%)
Active participation by all students during discussion period is a requirement.
For each weekly student presentation, all non-presenting students will be expected to submit a short 1 - 2 page critique of the assigned scientific paper and come to class with prepared questions for the student presenter.
Research Proposals (30%)
Proposals will be in typical grant style (max 4 pages). Topics will be in areas unrelated to the students current area of investigation or area of investigation in their supervisors lab.
Schedule
All seminars are run by Dr. Rozakis Adcock.
Date |
Topic |
---|---|
January 11, 2024 |
Introduction |
January 18 - February 15 |
Session 1: Epigenetics, Cancer, |
February 22 - March 14 |
Session 2: Novel Therapeutic Targets in Cancer Metabolism |
March 21 - April 4 |
Session 3: Diabetes and Cancer |