This repository contains a script and notebooks used in Richard Neher's part of the Physics of Life 1 course (co-taught with Sebastian Hiller) for 2nd year BSc students in Biology at the University of Basel. The material is taught over 6-7 weeks, three hours per week. The main topics we touch on are
- Quantitative reasoning in biology; relevant length, time and energy scales
- Ordinary differential equations in biology, e.g. growth processes
- Simple models of gene regulation
- Random walks and diffusion
- Models of stiff and flexible polymers
- Reaction-diffusion systems
- Membrane-less organelles and liquid-liquid phase transitions
The lecture notes are typeset in Latex. A rendered PDF if available here in this repository at lecture-notes.pdf.
Much of the course material is provided in the form of Jupyter notebooks. These notebooks are in the notebooks
directory and can be viewed and executed in jupyter.
Instructions to use the UniBas Jupyterhub can be found here.
Alternatively, you can use the static online version of jupyter available at
https://jupyterlite.github.io/demo/lab/index.html
This will allow you to work on and run jupyter notebooks in you web browser. However, all files you create live in your browser cache which is not persisting. So make sure to explicitly "download" whatever you want to keep.
A small collection of python and notebook basics is provided as well.
- Background: Introduction to partial differential equations (3Blue1Brown)
- Background: Solutions to the heat and diffusion equation (3Blue1Brown)
- Video lecture by Eric Wieschaus on Drosophila development
- Video lecture by Eric Wieschaus on Gradient formation in Drosophila
- Video lecture by Cliff Brangwynne on Membrane-less organelles and liquid-liquid phase transitions
- Video by Julie Theriot on The dynamic cytoskeleton
During the COVID-19 pandemic, this course was not held in person. Instead, lectures were recorded. I provide links to these recordings here in case they might be useful for some. Note, however, that the content of the course is evolving over the years and these recordings from 2020 do not correspond exactly to the current lecture content.
- The relevant scales: sizes, energies, concentrations
- Growth processes and differential equations
- Brownian motion, diffusion, and Fick's law
- Polymers
- Gene regulation
- Liquid-liquid phase transitions
- Fidelity, accuracy, and kinetic proof-reading