The ability to manage the constantly growing clinically relevant information in genetics available on the internet is becoming crucial in medical practice. Therefore, training students in teaching environments that develop bioinformatics skills is a particular challenge to medical schools. We present here an instructional approach that potentiates learning of hormone/vitamin mechanisms of action in gene regulation with the acquisition and practice of bioinformatics skills. The activity is integrated within the study of the Endocrine System module. Given a nucleotide sequence of a hormone or vitamin-response element, students use internet databases and tools to find the gene to which it belongs. Subsequently, students search how the corresponding hormone/vitamin influences the expression of that particular gene and how a dysfunctional interaction might cause disease. This activity was presented for four consecutive years to cohorts of 50–60 students/year enrolled in the 2nd year of the medical degree. 90% of the students developed a better understanding of the usefulness of bioinformatics and 98% intend to use web-based resources in the future. Since hormones and vitamins regulate genes of all body organ systems, this activity successfully integrates the whole body physiology of the medical curriculum.
[1]
Clifford A. Meyer,et al.
Genome-wide analysis of estrogen receptor binding sites
,
2006,
Nature Genetics.
[2]
M. Waters.
Endocrinology: the next 60 years--the helix and the chip.
,
2006,
The Journal of endocrinology.
[3]
C. Martin,et al.
Integration of internet-based genetic databases into the medical school pre-clinical and clinical curriculum
,
2006,
Genetics in Medicine.
[4]
S. Haga.
Teaching resources for genetics
,
2006,
Nature Reviews Genetics.
[5]
S. Brenner.
Humanity As the Model System
,
2003,
Science.
[6]
Jeffrey I. Gordon,et al.
Bringing the Human Genome and the Revolution in Bioinformatics to the Medical School Classroom: A Case Report from Washington University School of Medicine
,
2001,
Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.
[7]
Sansom,et al.
Computer applications in biomolecular sciences. Part 2: bioinformatics and genome projects.
,
2000,
Biochemical education.