BCH210H1 - Biochemistry I: Proteins, Lipids and Metabolism
Course: BCH210H1 (Biochemistry I: Proteins, Lipids and Metabolism) in BCH department at University of Toronto.
Credit Hours: 36 • Academic Level: second-year undergraduate course
Course Requirements: Requires 4 prerequisite courses
Prerequisite Chain Depth: 4 levels of foundational courses required
Future Opportunities: Unlocks 57 advanced courses for further study
Course Type: Core pathway course - critical for degree progression
Part of the BCH curriculum at University of Toronto, helping students progress through degree requirements.
Courses unlocked by BCH210H1
- PSL304H1 - Topics in Cellular, Molecular and Organismic Physiology I
- PSL310H1 - Clinical Reasoning
- BCH373H1 - Independent Research Project
- BCH340H1 - Proteins: From Structure to Function
- BCH446H1 - Membrane Dynamics of the Cell Surface
- BCH450H1 - Antibiotics and Antibiotic Targets
- HMB402H1 - Topics in Translational Medicine
- HMB490Y1 - Health in Community
- LMP305Y1 - Pathobiology Research Analysis and Project
- MGY441H1 - Bioinformatics
- PHC331H1 - Establishing the Bioequivalence of Pharmaceutical Products
- PHC435H1 - Pharmaceutical Data Acquisition and Analysis
- BCH422H1 - Membrane Proteins: Structure, and Function
- BCH428H1 - Genomics of Microbial Communities in Human Health and Beyond
- BCH445H1 - Organelles in Cell Function and Death
- CHM479H1 - Biological Chemistry
- CSB450H1 - Proteomics in Systems Biology
- PSL425H1 - Integrative Metabolism and its Endocrine Regulation
- PSL450H1 - Mechanisms of Neural and Endocrinal Secretion
- HMB304H1 - Challenges of Antimicrobial Resistance in Human Biology
- HMB437H1 - The Biology of the Human Metallome
- IMM428H1 - Molecular Immunology
- LMP301H1 - Introduction to the Biochemistry of Human Disease
- LMP310H1 - Fundamentals of Pathobiology
- LMP405Y1 - Project in Pathobiology
- LMP430H1 - Metabolic Disorders
- MGY377H1 - Microbiology I: Bacteria
- MGY378H1 - Microbiology II: Viruses
- MGY428H1 - Functional Genomics
- NFS400H1 - Functional Foods and Nutraceuticals in Human Nutrition
- NFS484H1 - Advanced Nutrition
- NFS485H1 - Diet, Microbiome & Health
- NFS486H1 - Obesity: Metabolic and Clinical Aspects
- NFS488H1 - Nutritional Toxicology
- NFS489H1 - Nutritional Neurosciences
- PCL477H1 - The DNA Damage Response in Pharmacology and Toxicology
- PHC301H1 - Molecular Pharmacology 2
- PHC320H1 - Chemistry and Technologies in Drug Discovery
- BCH311H1 - Biochemistry II: Nucleic Acids and Biological Information Flow
- BCH426H1 - Regulation of Signalling Pathways
- BCH440H1 - Protein Homeostasis
- BCH444H1 - Protein Trafficking in the Secretory & Endocytic Pathways
- BCH448H1 - Structure and Function of the Nucleus
- BCH449H1 - Medical Biochemistry
- HMB441H1 - Genetics of Human Disease
- BCH370H1 - Laboratory Course in Biochemical Techniques
- BCH374Y1 - Research Project in Biochemistry
- BCH375H1 - Independent Research Project
- BCH425H1 - Structural Biology: Principles and Practice
- CHM379H1 - Biomolecular Chemistry
- HMB434H1 - Complementary & Integrative Medicine
- IMM360H1 - Scientific Methods and Research in Immunology
- IMM435H1 - Practical Immunology
- PCL386H1 - Pharmacology of Cancer Signaling
- PHC340Y1 - Pharmaceutical Chemistry Laboratory
- PSL305H1 - Topics in Cellular, Molecular and Organismic Physiology II
- PSL350H1 - Mammalian Molecular Biology
Academic Planning at University of Toronto
Students planning BCH210H1 at University of Toronto should complete 4 prerequisites before enrollment.
Course Sequence: This course requires a 4-level prerequisite chain, requiring careful multi-semester planning for optimal progression.
Future Pathways: Completing BCH210H1 enables enrollment in 57 advanced courses for further study
This second-year course at University of Toronto integrates into structured degree pathways for BCH programs, supporting timely graduation and academic progression.