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  1. Biological Chemistry I | Chemistry | MIT OpenCourseWare

    MIT OpenCourseWare is a web based publication of virtually all MIT course content. OCW is open and available to the world and is a permanent MIT activity

  2. Module I: Basic Biochemistry - MIT OpenCourseWare

    Module I: Basic Biochemistry « Previous | Next » Session 1: What is Biochemistry?

  3. Lecture Notes | Biochemistry Laboratory - MIT OpenCourseWare

    This section provides the schedule of lecture topics along with notes and slides from selected sessions.

  4. Lecture Notes | Graduate Biochemistry - MIT OpenCourseWare

    Graduate Biochemistry Lecture Notes The Major Concepts (PDF) Kinetics (PDF) Molecular Graphics (RasMol) (PDF) Obtaining CKS™ (Chemical Kinetics Simulator 1.01) (PDF) CKS …

  5. Session 1: What is Biochemistry? - MIT OpenCourseWare

    Module I: Basic Biochemistry Session 1: What is Biochemistry? « Previous | Next » Lecture Topics What is Life? Cellular Components: Water and Amino Acids The Importance of …

  6. General Biochemistry | Biology | MIT OpenCourseWare

    NOTE: The first half of this course, taught by Prof. Yaffe, is available on the MITx platform as 7.05x Biochemistry: Biomolecules, Methods, and Mechanisms. This OCW website provides …

  7. Session 2: Protein Structure and Function - MIT OpenCourseWare

    Module I: Basic Biochemistry Session 2: Protein Structure and Function « Previous | Next » Lecture Topics Peptide Bond Formation Hierarchy in Protein Structure with Hemoglobin (Hb) …

  8. Video Lectures | General Biochemistry - MIT OpenCourseWare

    The first half of this course, taught by Prof. Yaffe, is available on the MITx platform as 7.05x Biochemistry: Biomolecules, Methods, and Mechanisms. The videos below are from the …

  9. Biochemistry | Fundamentals of Biology - MIT OpenCourseWare

    This unit introduces the course and covers the basics of biochemistry and cell composition.

  10. Session 3: Enzymes and Catalysis - MIT OpenCourseWare

    In this classroom lecture, Professor Stubbe focuses on enzymes as catalysts. She describes the theory and mechanics of catalysis and explains why enzymes are so important.