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Undergraduate students explain biochemistry research

Undergraduate students explain research at Otago Biochemistry

Learn about our research as explained by our undergraduate students.

The Department of Biochemistry teaches two types of students:
Undergraduates learn about biochemistry that has already been discovered.
Postgraduates start to do research projects themselves and discover new things about biochemistry.

As part of their study, our third-year undergraduates learn about some of the research that postgrad and academic researchers do in the department, including:

  • Gene therapy for rare brain disease
  • How mussels might be able to survive climate change
  • How cancer works
  • How creatures survive being frozen
  • Gene editing using CRISPR-Cas9

The undergrads explain this research to high school students around Dunedin. They also talk about what biochemistry is, and what it’s like to study it at Otago.

Here are some of their presentations (videos, handouts, and posters).

Studying biochemistry at university

Gene therapy for Batten Disease – Protein structure – Green-lipped mussels and climate change

Studying biochemistry at university – Breast cancer research – How creatures survive being frozen

Breast cancer research – PCR and gel electrophoresis – Studying biochemistry

What is biochemistry? – Studying biochemistry – How creatures survive being frozen – Studying brain diseases – Growing a brain on a dish – Crispr-Cas9 gene editing

CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing – What is biochemistry? – Careers with a biochem degree (handout)

Take this Kahoot quiz based on the handout.

Making ryegrass more nutritious for sheep and cows – Research into rare genetic diseases – Student life Q and A (poster)

Take this Kahoot quiz based on the poster.

Gene expression – The function of mRNA vaccines (handout)

Cancer (poster)


Other useful links: