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12 September 2022 Assessing Student Conceptions of Protein Synthesis with a Case Study in CRISPR and De-Extinction
Kadee G. Rutkowske, Jacob N. Willis, Andrea M.-K. Bierema
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Abstract

Scientific modeling is a practice that we use frequently in our undergraduate biomedical applications course for nonscience majors. We use case studies in which students apply course concepts to create cause- and-effect models. In this article, we describe a case study assessment on protein synthesis that examines the use of CRISPR to bring back the mammoth (i.e., de-extinction). Students learn about protein synthesis throughout the course and work on various case study scenarios to apply those concepts. Their final assessment is a team project to illustrate how protein synthesis is influenced by gene editing, including gene expression and its regulation, transcription, translation, protein structure and function, and the ultimate impact on an organism's phenotype. Although we use this case study as an assessment, it is also appropriate as a class activity in which students practice modeling the CRISPR gene-editing system.

Kadee G. Rutkowske, Jacob N. Willis, and Andrea M.-K. Bierema "Assessing Student Conceptions of Protein Synthesis with a Case Study in CRISPR and De-Extinction," The American Biology Teacher 84(7), 415-421, (12 September 2022). https://doi.org/10.1525/abt.2022.84.7.415
Published: 12 September 2022
JOURNAL ARTICLE
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KEYWORDS
CRISPR
de-extinction
DNA
gene editing
mammoth
protein synthesis
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