Studying at the University of Verona

Here you can find information on the organisational aspects of the Programme, lecture timetables, learning activities and useful contact details for your time at the University, from enrolment to graduation.

This information is intended exclusively for students already enrolled in this course.
If you are a new student interested in enrolling, you can find information about the course of study on the course page:

Laurea in Bioinformatica - Enrollment from 2025/2026

Type D and Type F activities

Type D educational activities are at the student's choice, Type F activities are additional knowledge useful for job placement (internships, transversal skills, project works, etc.). According to the Didactic Regulations of the Course, some activities can be chosen and entered independently in the booklet, others must be approved by a special committee to verify their consistency with the study plan. Type D or F training activities can be covered by the following activities.

1. Teachings delivered at the University of Verona.

Include the teachings listed below and/or in the Catalog of Teachingshttps://www.univr.it/it/catalogo-insegnamenti - Opens in a new window (which can also be filtered by language of delivery via Advanced Search).

Booklet entry mode: if the teaching is included among those listed below, the student can enter it independently during the period- Opens in a new window in which the syllabus is open; otherwise, the student must make a request to the Secretariat, sending to carriere.scienze@ateneo.univr.it- Opens in a new window the form- Opens in a new window in the period indicated- Opens in a new window.

2. CLA language certificate or equivalency.

In addition to those required by the curriculum, the following are recognized for those matriculated from A.Y. 2021/2022:

  • English language: 3 CFUs are recognized for each level of proficiency above that required by the course of study (if not already recognized in the previous course of study).
  • Other languages and Italian for foreigners: 3 cfu are recognized for each proficiency level starting from A2 (if not already recognized in the previous study cycle).

These cfu will be recognized, up to a maximum of 6 cfu in total, of type F if the teaching plan allows it, or of type D. Additional elective credits for language knowledge may be recognized only if consistent with the student's educational project and if adequately motivated.

Those matriculated up to A.Y. 2020/2021 should consult the information found here- services - cla - language exercises - science and engineering https://www.scienzeingegneria.univr.it/?ent=iniziativa&id=4688 - Opens in a new window.

Booklet entry modeapply for the certificate- Opens in a new window orequivalency- services - recognition of external language certifications - cla Opens in a new window to the CLA and send it to the Student Secretariat - Careers for the inclusion of the exam in the career, by email: carriere.scienze@ateneo.univr.it- Opens in a new window

3. Soft skills

Discover the training paths promoted by the University's TALC - Teaching and learning centerhttps://talc.univr.it/ - Opens in a new window, intended for students regularly enrolled in the academic year of course delivery https://talc.univr.it/it/competenze-trasversali- Opens in a new window

Booklet entry mode: The teaching is not intended to be included in the syllabus. Only upon obtaining theOpen Badgehttps://talc.univr.it/it/servizi/open-badge - Opens in a new window will the booklet CFUs be automatically validated. The registration of CFUs in career is not instantaneous, but there will be some technical time to wait.

4. Contamination lab

The Contamination Lab Verona (CLab Verona) is an experiential pathway with modules dedicated to innovation and business culture that offers the opportunity to work in teams with students from all courses of study to solve challenges launched by companies and institutions. The pathway allows students to receive 6 CFUs in the D or F area. Discover the challenges: https://www.univr.it/clabverona- Opens in a new window

PLEASE NOTE: To be eligible to take any teaching activity, including electives, you must be enrolled in the year of the course in which it is offered. Therefore, it is recommended that undergraduates of the December and April sessions DO NOT take extracurricular activities of the new academic year, in which they are not enrolled, since these degree sessions are valid with reference to the previous academic year. Therefore, for activities carried out in an academic year in which they are not enrolled, no recognition of CFUs can be given.

5. Internship/internship period

In addition to the CFUs stipulated in the curriculum (check carefully what is indicated on the Educational Regulationshere- services - internships and apprenticeships - science and engineering It opens in a new window you can find information on how to activate the internship.

Check in the regulations which activities can be Type D and which can be Type F.

Please also note that for internships activated from October 1, 2024, it will be possible to recognize excess hours in terms of Type D credits, limited only to internship experiences carried out at host institutions outside the University.

Academic year:
Semester 1  From 10/1/24 To 1/31/25
years Modules TAF Teacher
2° 3° Attention Laboratory D Pietro Sala (Coordinator)
2° 3° Elements of Cosmology and General Relativity D Claudia Daffara (Coordinator)
2° 3° Introduction to quantum mechanics for quantum computing D Claudia Daffara (Coordinator)
2° 3° Introduction to smart contract programming for ethereum D Sara Migliorini (Coordinator)
2° 3° Python programming language [English edition] D Carlo Combi (Coordinator)
2° 3° BEYOND ARDUINO: FROM PROTOTYPE TO PRODUCT WITH STM MICROCONTROLLER D Franco Fummi (Coordinator)
2° 3° APP REACT PLANNING D Graziano Pravadelli (Coordinator)
2° 3° HW components design on FPGA D Franco Fummi (Coordinator)
Semester 2 From 3/3/25 To 6/13/25
years Modules TAF Teacher
2° 3° Attention Laboratory D Pietro Sala (Coordinator)
2° 3° LaTeX Language D Enrico Gregorio (Coordinator)
2° 3° Python programming language [Edizione in italiano] D Carlo Combi (Coordinator)
2° 3° Rapid prototyping on Arduino D Franco Fummi (Coordinator)
2° 3° Programming Challanges D Romeo Rizzi (Coordinator)
2° 3° Tools for development of applications of virtual reality and mixed D Andrea Giachetti (Coordinator)
2° 3° Development and life cycle of software of artificial intelligence software D Marco Cristani (Coordinator)
2° 3° Protection of intangible assets (SW and invention)between industrial law and copyright D Mila Dalla Preda (Coordinator)
List of courses with unassigned period
years Modules TAF Teacher
Subject requirements: mathematics D Franco Zivcovich (Coordinator)

Teaching code

4S003713

Credits

12

Language

Italian

Scientific Disciplinary Sector (SSD)

BIO/10 - BIOCHEMISTRY

Courses Single

Authorized

The teaching is organized as follows:

Mod.1 Laboratorio

Credits

3

Period

Semester 1

Academic staff

Valerio Marino

Laboratory of Bioinformatics - Module 1 - Theory

Credits

3

Period

Semester 1

Academic staff

Daniele Dell'Orco

Mod.2 Laboratorio

Credits

3

Period

Semester 2

Academic staff

Alejandro Giorgetti

Mod.2 Teoria

Credits

3

Period

Semester 2

Academic staff

Alejandro Giorgetti

Learning objectives

The course will provide the theoretical and practical basis to understand and employ algorithms and programs currently used to retrieve and analyze data contained in the most used biological data re-positories. The course is divided into two modules, as detailed below. Module 1: In this module student will become acquainted with some of the most used software tools for managing data in proteomics, genomics, biochemistry, molecular and structural biology. Students will be introduced to the analysis and the visualization of structural data of biological macromolecules and their complexes, and to the design of simple static and dynamic models of biomolecular net-works. The students will also be introduced to the most modern fields of systems biology. Module 2: In this module students will learn how to employ the basic bioinformatic tools for the ana-lysis, interpretation and prediction of biological data in proteomics, genomics, biochemistry, molecular biology. This course offers the possibility of applying state of the art bioinformatic tools to solve biolo-gical problems

Prerequisites and basic notions

There are no prerequisites

Program

------------------------
MM: Modulo 1
------------------------
Theoretical Module
- Overview of the main structural features of proteins and nucleic acids in relation to the concept of evolution. Introduction to biomolecular databases: online resources and their use
- Biological databases: organization and integration of information concerning: a) protein and nucleic acid sequences; b) biomolecular structures; c) bibliographic and scientific literature. Retrieve of specific information: use of limitations and Boolean operators.
- Sequence comparison and alignments: static and dynamic algorithms; substitution matrices (PAM,BLOSUM) - Search-algorithms: dynamic algorithms; Smith-Waterman; Needleman-Wunsch; statistic significance for an alignment (z-score, expectation values and probability); heuristic methods for local alignments; BLAST
- Multiple sequence alignments: ClustalW, search on specific databases, other algorithms, PSI-BLAST
- Introduction to Structural Bioinformatics: visualization and analysis of protein and nucleic acid 3D structures
- Methods to predict protein secondary structure elements starting from the sequence; introduction to neural networks. NN-based methods - Introduction to Systems Biology: Spatial and temporal scales, static and dynamic models, mathematical frameworks, introduction on signal transduction networks Laboratory Module
- NCBI databases: Entrez interface, Gene, UniGene, Protein, Uniprot and EBI
- Single and multiple sequence alignments, score matrices, optimal methods; online resources and spreadsheets - BLAST,PSI-BLAST and BLAT: online tools and their use
- Tools for multiple alignments, the Homologene databank, computation and visualization of multiple alignments - Introduction to PyMol and molecular visualization. Use of PSI-PRED and JPRED for predicting secondary structures from sequences - Systems biology: numerical simulation of simple biochemical reactions. Building simple kinetic models by using SBOTOOLBOX2 for Matlab; application to G-potein signalling cycles.
-----------------------
MM: Modulo 2
------------------------
Bioinformatic tools for the analysis of molecular evolution and phylogenesis: Molecular clock, substitution models, methods for the construction of phylogenetic trees.
Protein structural predictions: Comparative modeling, Fold recognition and ab initio methods.
Gene prediction Functional annotation Microarrays: databases and programs for the analysis of expression data. Introduction to the energetic treatment of proteins: MD simulations, ligand-protein and protein-protein docking.
The teaching includes: front lectures and hands-on laboratories on the PC. The students are also involved in a project to be developed in groups.

Bibliography

Visualizza la bibliografia con Leganto, strumento che il Sistema Bibliotecario mette a disposizione per recuperare i testi in programma d'esame in modo semplice e innovativo.

Didactic methods

The course consists of frontal theory lessons, analysis and presentation of relevant scientific articles in the field of bioinformatics and laboratory lessons

Learning assessment procedures

------------------------ MM: Module 1 ---------------------- - Theory -------- The exam consists of a written test with 5 open questions on the topics covered in the course, each with a maximum score of 6 points. The paper has a duration of 75 minutes. The vote will be out of thirty. Laboratory ----------------- The exam, which can be taken on the same day as the theory paper, contains 3 exercises to be solved using the computer (each with a maximum of 10 points). The paper has a duration of 75 minutes. The vote will be out of thirty. Presentations -------------------- At the end of January the students present, in groups of 2 or 3 members, a database of their choice contained in the January issue of the journal Nucleic Acids Research (Database issue). They will have to illustrate, through a presentation of 10 minutes + 3 minutes for questions / discussions, the purpose of the database and an original application. They will obtain a score from 1 to 4, which will take into account the deepening of the topic, the clarity of presentation, the effectiveness of communication and mastery of the tools used. Final grade --------------- The final grade, out of thirty, will be obtained by adding the average between the grade of the theory test and the laboratory grade to the grade obtained in the presentation. ------------------------ MM: Module 2 ---------------------- - The exam is written and consists of an oral session of open questions on the topics covered in the course. In particular modeling, docking and gene annotation theories are required. The second phase consists in the drafting of a scientific handwritten document with the results obtained in the realization of the project assigned in class.

Students with disabilities or specific learning disorders (SLD), who intend to request the adaptation of the exam, must follow the instructions given HERE

Evaluation criteria

To pass the exam, the student must demonstrate: - to have understood the concept of homology and its practical implications in the bioinformatics field - to have understood the difference between similarity and identity between biological sequences - to be able to query databases of bioinformatics interest, to obtain and store the related data, carrying out appropriate cross-searches on different databases in order to carry out specific searches - knowing how to use algorithms for the comparison of nucleotide and amino acid sequences - knowing how to use software for molecular graphics and visualization - knowing how to build simple interaction networks between biomolecules and simulate the time course. Knowing how to use the specific language of bioinformatics Understanding critically in a scientific article in the field of applied bioinformatics
Building three-dimensional models of proteins
Using molecular docking techniques and understanding the underlying theory

Criteria for the composition of the final grade

The grade of module I consists of a presentation of scientific articles in groups and a written exam during the exam session. The form II grade has the same structure. The total grade is the arithmetic average of the grades of the two modules

Exam language

Italiano