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Cancer: Animations

From the 2003 Holiday Lectures — Learning From Patients: The Science of Medicine

p53

p53

A 3D animation showing the molecule p53 binds to DNA and initiates the transcription of mRNA.

25 seconds
Play Large: MOV / WMV (1 MB)
Play Small: MOV / WMV (0.6 MB)

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More About p53

The p53 molecule is a transcription factor, a protein that turns genes on. It recognizes and binds to specific DNA sequences adjacent to the genes that it controls. Once bound p53 recruits an RNA polymerase, which transcribes the gene into RNA.

This animation includes audio narration, please make sure your computer's volume is up so that you can hear it.

p53 Background

Knowing the genetic path that a particular cancer follows could someday help physicians better treat individual patients. By determining the genetic defects responsible for a specific cancer, physicians might be able to select the therapy that will be most effective at eliminating that cancer. Furthermore, each cancer-causing gene that researchers identify can serve as a target for the development of more specific therapies that will wipe out cancer cells while leaving healthy cells unharmed.

From lecture 2 of the 2003 Holiday Lectures Series "Learning From Patients: The Science of Medicine."

p53 Teaching Tips

The animations in this section have a wide variety of classroom applications. Use the tips below to get started but look for more specific teaching tips in the near future. Please tell us how you are using the animations in your classroom by sending e-mail to biointeractive@hhmi.org.

  1. Use the animations to make abstract scientific ideas visible and concrete.

  2. Explain important scientific principles through the animations. For example, the biological clocks animations can be used to demonstrate the fundamentals of transcription and translation.

  3. Make sure that students learn the material by repeating sections of the animations as often as you think necessary to reinforce underlying scientific principles. You can start, restart, and play back sections of the animations.

  4. Urge students to use the animations in accordance with their own learning styles. Students who are more visually oriented can watch the animations first and read the text later, while others might prefer to read the explanations first and then view the graphics.

  5. Incorporate the animations into Web-based learning modules that you create to supplement your classroom curricula.

  6. Encourage students to incorporate the animations into their own Web-based projects.

Resources

The 2003 Holiday Lectures Series "Learning From Patients: The Science of Medicine."

p53 Credits

Director: Dennis Liu, Ph.D.

Scientific Direction: Bert Vogelstein, M.D.

Scientific Content: Satoshi Amagai, Ph.D.

Animator: Eric Keller, Drew Berry

 

 

 
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