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I'm a non-traditional pre-MD/PhD student. I've given my back ground in a previous thread, so I'll give a briefer version here: age-26, B.A. in social science area, M.A. in Exercise Physiology, one year clinical rehab research experience (strength training in Parkinson's Disease patients), one year of pre-medical sciences (completed last year). Will take MCAT in April and apply MSTP this summer.
So I'm in the midst of my second week working in a molecular physiology lab full-time; it's demaning a pretty steep learning curve for me considering that I have no other molecular level preparation in biology or chemistry beyond a year of undergraduate orgo, a year of bio, and very general cellular physiology work I did in my graduate program.
I've been struggling to figure out a system for teaching myself enough molecular cell biology to keep up with the research I'm doing (mechanisms of p53 induction, stabilization, modification, etc.). I can't complain really, but I feel terribly inefficient going back and forth between textbooks, research articles, Wikipedia, etc. Does anyone have any suggestions for :
1) How I might Systematize my background prep (I can count on having 2-4 hours out of each day to do this)?
2) Web resources I might want to spend more time with?
3) Books you would recommend (not necessarily textbooks - auxiliary study guides that you have found helpful).
I'm thinking primarily along lines of structural/protein biology.
Thanks for your input in advance... this forum seemed like the most appropriate one for my questions.
So I'm in the midst of my second week working in a molecular physiology lab full-time; it's demaning a pretty steep learning curve for me considering that I have no other molecular level preparation in biology or chemistry beyond a year of undergraduate orgo, a year of bio, and very general cellular physiology work I did in my graduate program.
I've been struggling to figure out a system for teaching myself enough molecular cell biology to keep up with the research I'm doing (mechanisms of p53 induction, stabilization, modification, etc.). I can't complain really, but I feel terribly inefficient going back and forth between textbooks, research articles, Wikipedia, etc. Does anyone have any suggestions for :
1) How I might Systematize my background prep (I can count on having 2-4 hours out of each day to do this)?
2) Web resources I might want to spend more time with?
3) Books you would recommend (not necessarily textbooks - auxiliary study guides that you have found helpful).
I'm thinking primarily along lines of structural/protein biology.
Thanks for your input in advance... this forum seemed like the most appropriate one for my questions.