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> MIT 10.555 : bioinformatics    methods | principles | applications > spring 2004 |
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home ¬ course notes¬ assignments ¬ resources ¬ contacts ¬ announcements ¬ 02.03.2004: Welcome to 10.555! Syllabus and first lecture notes have been posted. 02.09.2004: Lecture 2 notes have been posted. |
> lecturers Gregory Stephanopoulos
> teaching assistant Adrian Fay
>the course This course provides an introduction to Bioinformatics. We define this field by the principles and computational methods aiming at the upgrade of the information content of the large volume of biological data generated by genome sequencing, as well as cell-wide measurements of gene expression (DNA microarrays), protein profiles (proteomics), metabolites and metabolic fluxes. Additionally, bioinformatics is concerned with whole organism data, especially physiological variable measurements including organ function assessments, hormone levels, blood flow, neuronal activity etc., that characterize normal and pathophysiology. The overall goal of this data upgrade process is to elucidate cell function and physiology from a comprehensive set of measurements as opposed to using single markers of cellular function. Fundamentals from systems theory will be presented to define modeling philosophies and simulation methodologies for the integration of genomic and physiological data in the analysis of complex biological processes, e.g. genetic regulatory networks and metabolic pathways. Various computational methods will address a broad spectrum of problems in functional genomics and cell physiology, including; analysis of sequences, (alignment, homology discovery, gene annotation), gene clustering, pattern recognition/discovery in large-scale expression data, elucidation of genetic regulatory circuits, analysis of metabolic networks and signal transduction pathways. Applications of bioinformatics to metabolic engineering, drug design, and biotechnology will be also discussed.> special features
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