Aim
This course introduces essential biotechnology techniques used to understand, detect, and combat deadly diseases. Participants will learn how modern diagnostics, molecular biology tools, immunotechnology, genomics, and bioinformatics support prevention, early detection, treatment development, and outbreak response. The program emphasizes practical lab-to-clinic thinking—how each technique is chosen, what it can (and cannot) prove, and how results translate into real biomedical action.
Program Objectives
- Build Core Molecular Skills: Understand key techniques used in infectious disease and cancer research.
- Modern Diagnostics: Learn PCR-based, immunoassay-based, and sequencing-based detection workflows.
- Genomics & Bioinformatics: Understand how omics data supports surveillance and therapeutic discovery.
- Therapeutic Development Basics: Learn how vaccines, antibodies, and RNA-based therapies are developed (overview).
- Biosafety & Quality Thinking: Understand containment, contamination control, and reliable reporting.
- Translational Decision-Making: Choose the right technique for the right question and interpret results responsibly.
- Hands-on Outcome: Build a disease-focused biotech workflow plan as a final project.
Program Structure
Module 1: Disease Biology + Where Biotechnology Fits
- What makes a disease “deadly”: virulence, immune evasion, resistance, late diagnosis.
- Infectious vs non-infectious deadly diseases: differences in strategies.
- From sample to answer: diagnostics pipeline overview.
- Prevention vs cure vs control: biotech’s role in each.
Module 2: Sample Handling, Biosafety & Quality Foundations
- Sample types: blood, saliva, swabs, tissue biopsies (what changes in workflow).
- Biosafety basics: contamination control, PPE, and safe handling discipline.
- Quality mindset: controls, repeatability, and documentation.
- Common failure points: contamination, degradation, mix-ups, and false positives.
Module 3: Molecular Diagnostics (PCR, qPCR, RT-PCR)
- Principle of PCR and why it detects disease agents and mutations.
- RT-PCR for RNA viruses: workflow overview and interpretation.
- qPCR basics: Ct values, standard curves (concept), and reporting discipline.
- Primer/probe design thinking and contamination prevention strategies.
Module 4: Immunotechnology & Serological Testing
- Antigen–antibody basics for diagnostics and therapy.
- ELISA and rapid tests: how they work and what they measure.
- Neutralization concept: why some antibodies protect better than others.
- Limitations: cross-reactivity, timing of immune response, false results.
Module 5: Genomics & Sequencing for Disease Detection and Surveillance
- Sanger vs NGS (overview): what each is used for.
- Whole genome sequencing for pathogen tracking (outbreak surveillance concept).
- Variant detection basics: mutation monitoring and resistance signals.
- RNA-Seq concept for host response and disease signatures.
Module 6: Cell Culture, Assays & Functional Testing (Overview)
- Cell culture basics: why we need in vitro systems.
- Cytotoxicity and efficacy assays: what they indicate.
- Viral assays concept: plaque assay, TCID50 (overview).
- From screening to validation: how lab assays support therapeutic decisions.
Module 7: Therapeutic Biotechnology (Vaccines, Antibodies, RNA Tools)
- Vaccine platforms overview: inactivated, subunit, viral vector, mRNA.
- Monoclonal antibodies: production basics and therapeutic logic.
- RNA therapeutics overview: siRNA, antisense, CRISPR (where each fits).
- Drug resistance and why combination strategies matter.
Module 8: Bioinformatics & AI Support in Disease Control
- How bioinformatics supports diagnostics and drug/vaccine design.
- Basics of sequence alignment, phylogeny, and variant tracking (conceptual).
- AI in outbreak monitoring: early warning signals and pattern detection (overview).
- Responsible interpretation: avoiding overclaiming from computational outputs.
Module 9: Case Labs (Real Disease Scenarios)
- Case A: Viral outbreak workflow (sample → RT-PCR → sequencing → surveillance).
- Case B: Antibiotic resistance detection (PCR/NGS + interpretation).
- Case C: Cancer biomarker workflow (qPCR/ELISA + validation thinking).
- Case D: Rapid diagnostics deployment planning (quality and ethics focus).
Final Project
- Create a Disease Control Biotech Workflow Plan for one deadly disease (infectious or non-infectious).
- Include: diagnostic strategy, key techniques, controls, interpretation plan, biosafety notes, and next-step decisions.
- Example projects: TB resistance detection workflow, dengue early diagnosis strategy, cancer biomarker panel plan, viral outbreak surveillance plan.
Participant Eligibility
- UG/PG students in Biotechnology, Microbiology, Genetics, Biochemistry, Biomedical Sciences, or related fields
- Researchers and lab professionals interested in disease diagnostics and translational biotech
- Healthcare and public health learners exploring modern biotech tools
- Anyone seeking a structured overview of key biotech techniques for disease control
Program Outcomes
- Technique Awareness: Understand key biotech tools used in diagnosis, surveillance, and therapy development.
- Interpretation Skills: Ability to read results and understand limitations and false signal risks.
- Workflow Thinking: Ability to select the right techniques for the right disease question.
- Quality & Biosafety Mindset: Understand controls, documentation, and safe handling practices.
- Portfolio Deliverable: A disease-focused biotech workflow plan you can showcase.
Program Deliverables
- Access to e-LMS: Full access to course content, case materials, and reference resources.
- Templates & Checklists: Diagnostic workflow template, QC checklist, biosafety checklist, interpretation sheet.
- Case-Based Learning: Guided scenario exercises across infectious disease and cancer contexts.
- Project Guidance: Mentor support for final workflow plan and reporting.
- Final Assessment: Certification after assignments + capstone submission.
- e-Certification and e-Marksheet: Digital credentials provided upon successful completion.
Future Career Prospects
- Biotechnology Research Assistant / Lab Associate
- Molecular Diagnostics Associate
- Clinical Research / Translational Research Associate
- Genomics & Bioinformatics Support Associate
- Public Health Laboratory Support / Surveillance Associate
Job Opportunities
- Diagnostic Labs & Hospitals: Molecular testing, immunoassays, and reporting teams.
- Biotech & Pharma: Vaccine/antibody development support and translational R&D roles.
- Research Institutes: Infectious disease and cancer biology labs.
- CROs: Clinical research support, assay development, and lab operations.
- Public Health Agencies: Disease surveillance and outbreak response laboratory teams.









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