| Code: | CN11004 | Acronym: | QORG |
| Keywords | |
|---|---|
| Classification | Keyword |
| OFICIAL | Health Sciences |
| OFICIAL | Physical Sciences |
| Active? | Yes |
| Web Page: | http://bioquimica.med.up.pt/ensino/index.html |
| Course/CS Responsible: | Nutrition Sciences |
| Acronym | No. of Students | Study Plan | Curricular Years | Credits UCN | Credits ECTS | Contact hours | Total Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CNUP | 92 | Plano oficial | 1 | - | 5,5 | 56 | 148,5 |
The contributions that each one of you will receive for their scientific, professional and human formation are not in any way confined to school walls.
The main agent of that training is always each one of you asking questions and finding answers that will form part of the personal knowledge collected from multiple sources. The variety of these sources is increasingly wide in a world that, with the recent advances in information technology, increasingly resembles a large village. In old times the school could play the role of privileged and unquestioned source of knowledge, at present this role no longer makes sense.
The role of schools and teachers, in our view, is to encourage and assist the students in pursuit of their own training and to facilitate this process by proposing topics for study which act as stages of its formation. The choice of these themes, and the depth with which they are developed, is not an abstract exercise, impartial and thorough, but rather the result of a series of questionable choices and continually reshaped by new challenges that science is proposing and also by personal experience of teachers, either as teachers or as researchers.
Being part of a series of topics proposed for the reflection of the students during their degree in Nutritional Sciences, this curricular unit of organic chemistry is very close to the curricular units of Biochemistry I (also taught in the first year of the course) and Biochemistry II and Biochemistry III (bought taught in the second year).
The same teaching staff is responsible for the four curricular units, with organic chemistry being understood by this team as a sub-step (in fact the first!) in the process of language acquisition needed for Biochemistry and in the knowledge of their methods of study and its fundamental laws.
In this sub-step we put particular emphasis on (1) the study of the chemical structures of the living organisms and (2) the study of general aspects of chemistry and organic chemistry, with particular interest for understanding the chemical transformation occurring in living organisms.
At the end of this Curricular Unit, students should have acquired the theoretical and/or laboratorial knowledge regarding macromolecules structure and enzyme catalysis and regulation, relevant not only for Biochemistry I, II and III Curricular Units but also for Nutritional Sciences, which will contribute to their professional performance.
Chemical components of living organisms: carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, water and inorganic compounds. Structure of carbohydrates, lipids and proteins. Aspects of general chemistry and organic chemistry with particular interest for the understanding of chemical transformations of the living organisms and their own food. Functional groups, isomerism, chemical equilibria, kinetics and chemical reactions, acid-base and oxidation-reduction reactions. Enzymatic reactions (catalysis and functional classification) and its regulation. Composition of biological fluids and phase systems. Alkaline phosphatase.
Weekly/per student, 2 lectures of 1 hour each and 1 practical session of 2h, during 12 weeks.
| Designation | Weight (%) |
|---|---|
| Exame | 85,00 |
| Teste | 5,00 |
| Trabalho escrito | 5,00 |
| Trabalho laboratorial | 5,00 |
| Total: | 100,00 |
Final written exam: 17 out 20 points.
Laboratorial evaluation: 3 out 20 points [consisting of some written questions at the end of each class (1 point), a small written report regarding the enzymes laboratorial classes (1 point) and laboratorial performance (1 point)].
Teaching language: Portuguese