| (*)Upon completing the course, students will possess the following skills. They are able to
 describe the structural and mechanical properties of biological systems at different scales and assess the relevance of these properties for biological functions (k2, k3);
explain the relationship between the structures of biological systems and their mechanical properties (k2);
apply fundamental physical concepts to biological structures and processes and describe these structures and processes (k3);
evaluate the suitability and limitations of experimental physical methods for studying biological systems (k3);
apply learned physical principles to new or related biological questions (k4).
 | (*)During the course, students will acquire knowledge in the following areas and concepts of mechanobiology and tissue engineering: biopolymers;
thermodynamics and kinetics of molecular interactions;
effect of forces on molecular interactions;
protein mechanics;
viscoelasticity;
cytoskeleton;
molecular motors;
cell mechanics;
cell adhesion and migration;
force generation and mechanosensing in biological systems;
mechanical properties of tissues;
mechanical regulation processes in mammalian, plant and bacterial cells.
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