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Division of Graduate Medical Sciences Bulletin

Research and Training Program in Human Genetics

Program in Human Genetics
Courses in Human Genetics
Faculty

Director, Center for Human Genetics
Aubrey Milunsky

Genes control the basis of all life, govern the development of all species, influence the response or susceptibility to all disease, affect the body's response to all environmental agents (e.g., drugs, microorganisms, toxins), and are causally related to, modulate or influence all the common diseases of man, and, when defective, cause a major disease burden for society.

The advent of the "New Genetics" has brought heretofore undreamt of horizons to science and medicine. Remarkable advances in genetics have affected diverse scientific fields including agriculture, farming, entomology, the pharmaceutical industry, engineering, computer science, informatics, and medicine. Human genetics is at the vortex of this ever-widening circle of discovery and spans all basic sciences and virtually all the clinical disciplines. Dramatic advances have already occurred through the Human Genome Project through which an escalating number of genes causing specific serious genetic diseases have already been cloned. Expectations are that the vast majority of defective genes causing serious genetic disease will have been cloned soon after the turn of the century. Over 3,500 specific monogenic diseases have been catalogued. As a consequence of these continuing advances, new precise DNA-based diagnostic methods have emerged and are in use in the Center for Human Genetics. Detection of gene carriers, presymptomatic or predictive diagnosis and prenatal diagnosis have all assumed key roles in the application of new knowledge in human genetics. Advances in genetic biotechnology will facilitate determination of genetic predisposition and susceptibility to disease and have already facilitated the development of gene therapy.

The interdisciplinary program in human genetics provides a wide ranging perspective on human genetic disease and the science and technology used to map and clone genes. As a prerequisite to understanding the molecular analysis of DNA, course selections focus on the development of a thorough understanding of molecular genetics, biochemical genetics, cytogenetics, immunogenetics, genetic epidemiology, pharmacogenetics, and somatic cell genetics. Thesis work in all these subject areas will equip successful candidates with knowledge, training, and experience suitable for major careers in medicine, science, industry, and government.


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Program in Human Genetics

The interdisciplinary program in Human Genetics has been established primarily for the graduate student who seeks a career presenting diverse opportunities in academe, industry, or government in which teaching, research, diagnostics, industrial production, and regulatory affairs figure most prominently. This course of study prepares students for careers in industry or, through postdoctoral programs, in a whole range of specialties and opportunities within the vast arena encompassed by human genetics. For example, the Center for Human Genetics at the School of Medicine is accredited by the American Board of Medical Genetics for postdoctoral training and board certification for PhDs in human genetics in the specialties of clinical genetics, clinical cytogenetics, and clinical molecular genetics. These certifications lead to careers in academe, genetics research, diagnostic laboratories, and industry.

Students in the Human Genetics program who enter with a bachelor's degree may choose from new courses in human genetics. The intent of these courses is to provide a firm foundation in molecular biology, molecular genetics, and biostatistics.


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Courses in Human Genetics

The following are full-semester 4-credit courses required for all candidates for the PhD in human genetics:

GMS HG 781 Introduction to Human Genetics
GMS HG 881 Human Genetics
GMS HG 850 Human Genetics Seminar (2 cr)
GMS HG 901, 902 Research in Human Genetics
ENG BE 565 Introduction to Biochemical and Genetic Engineering

Courses

GMS HG 781 Introduction to Human Genetics
Prereq: general biology, genetics, biochemistry, cell biology, molecular genetics or the equivalent, and consent of instructor. The basic principles and research methods of human genetics, including the study of genes at the molecular, chromosomal, organismal, and population levels. Emphasis is on classical genetic examples of human disease. Applications of the technology in gene identification, genetic testing, and forensic science are presented. Farrer. 1st sem.

GMS HG 881, 882 Human Genetics I and II
Prereq: MED HG 781 or consent of the instructor. Explores strategies for gene mapping, sequencing and cloning, and includes detailed consideration of genetic and physical mapping, aspects of immunogenetics, and the basic principles that underpin the development of gene therapy. Key additional aspects covered include gene organization and expression, genetic recombination, mutation, genotype and phenotype association, cytogenetics, genetic epidemiology, advanced topics in human genetics, forensic genetics, evolutionary genetics, the biochemical basis of genetic disease, and the basics of DNA diagnostics. Amemiya, Milunsky. 8 cr, 1st and 2nd sem.

GMS HG 850 Human Genetics Seminar
Prereq: (MED ME 781) Introduction to Human Genetics and consent of instructor. Students are required to attend weekly seminars in human genetics and to present two seminars in a semester. Staff. 2 cr.

GMS HG 901, 902 Research in Human Genetics
Provides students with opportunities to undertake independent or directed research in subjects on human genetics approved by the appropriate faculty member and program committee. 4 cr.


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Faculty

Chris T. Amemiya PhD, Associate Professor of Pediatrics, Professor of Pediatrics

Clinton T. Baldwin PhD, Associate Professor of Pediatrics and Biochemistry

Lindsay A. Farrer PhD, Professor of Neurology

Roger V. Lebo PhD, Associate Professor of Pediatrics

Richard H. Meyers PhD, Professor of Neurology

Aubrey Milunsky MD, DSc, Professor of Human Genetics, Pediatrics, Obstetrics and Gynecology, and Pathology and Laboratory Medicine

Devaki N. Sadhu PhD, Research Assistant Professor of Pediatrics

Herman E. Wyandt Jr. PhD, Associate Professor of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine

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11 March 1999
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