Ing Swie Goping

Professor, Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry - Biochemistry Dept

Contact

Professor, Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry - Biochemistry Dept
Email
igoping@ualberta.ca
Phone
(780) 492-6130
Address
5-73A Medical Sciences Building
8613 - 114 St NW
Edmonton AB
T6G 2H7

Email
igoping@ualberta.ca

Overview

Area of Study / Keywords


About

Dr. Ing Swie Goping is currently appointed as Professor in the Department of Biochemistry in the Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry.

Courses

BIOCH 410 - Signal Transduction

Principles of the biochemistry of cell communication and signal transduction through receptor activation, generation of second messengers, control of protein modifications and regulation of the cell cycle. The course emphasizes mechanisms responsible for the regulation of cell migration, division and death with an emphasis on cancer. Prerequisites: BIOCH 310, 320 and 330, all with a minimum grade of B-, or consent of the Department. This course is intended for students in Honors or Specialization in Biochemistry. Students in other programs may be admitted subject to availability and with the consent of the Department. Graduate students may not register for credit (see BIOCH 510).


BIOCH 419 - Communicating Biochemistry

This credit/no-credit course introduces students to the skills required to effectively communicate research in biochemistry. Communication skills will be developed through critical evaluation, identification of effective techniques, and practice. Students will communicate research data to various target audiences, through oral presentations in particular and with a focus on the effective use of images and diagrams to represent and explain research findings. Prerequisites: BIOCH 310, 320 and 330, and consent of the instructor. Co-requisite: BIOCH 499. This course is restricted to students in Honors or Specialization in Biochemistry.


BIOCH 510 - Signal Transduction

Principles of the biochemistry of cell communication and signal transduction through receptor activation, generation of second messengers, control of protein modifications and regulation of the cell cycle. The course emphasizes mechanisms responsible for the regulation of cell migration, division and death with an emphasis on cancer. Prerequisites: BIOCH 310, 320 and 330, all with a minimum grade of B-, or consent of the Department. Lectures are the same as for BIOCH 410, but with additional assignments and evaluation appropriate to graduate studies. This course may not be taken for credit if credit has already been obtained in BIOCH 410.


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