鶹Ժ

Skip to Content

Search

Search

Other ways to search:

  • Campus Map

Main menu

  • Home
  • About
  • Academics
  • Admissions
  • Research
  • Visit

Secondary Menu

  • 鶹Ժ
  • Faculty
  • Staff
  • Families

Search

Other ways to search:

  • Campus Map

Mobile menu

  • Home
  • About
  • Academics
  • Admissions
  • Research
  • Visit
  • 鶹Ժ
  • Faculty
  • Staff
  • Families

Breadcrumb

Home Research Research Focus Areas Biosciences

Biosciences

Translating science into healthier living

Biosciences at the University of Colorado Boulder aim to understand processes underlying behavior, function, disease and health at the molecular, cellular and whole-systems levels to develop interventions that improve human health.

Understanding healthy human and animal systems

Exploring disease states and diagnoses

Treatment strategies(shifts from disease to health; maintaining and optimizing health)

Biosciences News

The majestic Flatirons above Boulder framed in fall colors.

CU Boulder logs another record-breaking year in research funding

CU Boulder researchers attracted a record $684.2 million in fiscal year 2022–23 for studies that, among other things, elevate quantum science in Colorado, solve mysteries about the sun and provide even better data on sea ice, ice sheets, glaciers and more. Read more
DNA

How silencing a gene-silencer could lead to new cancer drugs

New CU Boulder research reveals how a molecular machine known as PRC2 helps determine which cells become heart cells, versus brain or muscle or skin cells. The findings shed light on how development occurs and could pave the way for novel cancer treatments. Read more
Two people holding hands

News flash: Opposites don't actually attract

A new, sweeping CU Boulder analysis suggests birds of a feather are indeed more likely to flock together, confirming what individual studies have hinted at for decades. Read more

Biosciences In-Depth Stories

Inscripta, Inc., a CU Boulder spinout company, is a global leader in automated, CRISPR-based gene editing.

CU Boulder commercialization drives $8 billion in impact nationwide

Activities led by Venture Partners at CU Boulder, the university’s commercialization arm, generated an economic impact of $8 billion nationally and $5.2 billion in the state of Colorado over the last five years Read more
Qizhong Liang, a PhD candidate in JILA and the Department of Physics, demonstrates how the laser-based breathalyzer works, in the Ye lab at JILA.

Sniffing out diseases in real time

Breathalyzer based on frequency comb spectroscopy quantum tech shows promise as a non-invasive diagnostic test for an array of diseases Read more
Baby touching rain spotted window

Prenatal pollution exposure may impact baby’s brain

When pregnant moms breathe dirty air, it may adversely impact their baby’s brain, CU Boulder research suggests Read more
Read more Biosciences Stories
鶹Ժ doing research in Yin student lab

Faculty Leaders

With over 650 faculty and students involved in interdisciplinary bioscience research, CU Boulder is home to a dynamic scientific ecosystem that is shaping tomorrow’s leaders.

Lab graphic

Impacting Humanity

Biosciences is the single greatest contributor to commercialization activity at CU Boulder. In the last two decades, at least 89 biotech startups have emerged with roots at CU.

Jennie Smoly Caruthers Biotechnology Building

Research Institutes

Researchers at CU Boulder are empowered to explore new areas of bioscience by leveraging resources and talents across the university’s dedicated institutes.

For Media

13

National Academy of Science members

89+

Biotech startups with roots at CU (past 20 years)

7

Distinguished Professors

8

American Association for the Advancement of Science members

Tom Cech

RNA & DNA Discoveries

Tom Cech discovered that RNA is not only a molecule that encodes information but also a catalyst. Cech’s discovery laid the foundations for advances in molecular genetics and a growing appreciation of the biological roles of RNA.

  • Nobel Prize in Chemistry (1989)
  • National Medal of Science (1995)
  • Distinguished Professor, Chemistry and Biochemistry

Faculty Leaders

Molecular graphic

Making Chemotherapy Safer

Marvin Caruthers co-founded Amgen in 1980 to apply his work with RNA synthesis, DNA synthesis and analogues. Today, Amgen’s therapies help prevent infections in patients undergoing chemotherapy.

  • Co-founder, Amgen Inc.
  • Distinguished Professor,Chemistry and Biochemistry

Faculty Leaders Impacting Humanity

Tin Tin Su

Fighting Cancer

Tin Tin Su’s innovative work with fruit flies led to the patenting of a compound that keeps radiation-treated cancer cells from re-growing. Her startup, SuviCa, develops cancer therapeutics that exploit a cellular mechanism critical to cancer re-growth after treatment with standard therapies.

  • Co-founder, SuviCa
  • Professor,

Faculty Leaders Impacting Humanity

Jogger on grassy path

Preventing Cardiovascular Disease

Doug Seals founded the Clinical Translational Research Center in 1999 to establish lifestyle and pharmacological strategies to extend “healthspan,” the period of healthy life. Now, Seals’ research focuses on slowing and preventing cardiovascular disease.

  • National Institutes of Health,National Institute on AgingMERIT Award
  • Professor of Distinction,Integrative Physiology

Faculty Leaders

Leslie Leinward

Leading in the Classroom

Leslie Leinwand is renowned for her study of the molecules involved in muscle contraction and heart disease. Her research opens the door to the possibility of personalized heart-disease treatment. Committed to teaching and training, Leinwand is a national influencer in shaping biomedical research policies.

  • Chief Scientific Officer, BioFrontiers Institute
  • Distinguished Professor,

Faculty Leaders

Virus infected cell graphic

Developing Treatments for Infectious Disease

Biologist Larry Gold, an internationally regarded DNA and RNA researcher, co-founded Synergen in 1981, when biotechnology was still an emerging field. In 1992, he founded NeXagen, now part of Gilead Sciences, which develops treatments for infectious disease. And in 2000, he founded SomaLogic with the goal of transforming how diseases are detected and diagnosed.

  • Professor,

Faculty Leaders Impacting Humanity

Illustration of pain in a person's wrist

Pain Management

Linda Watkins strives to understand how to control pathological pain states. Her work has yielded 300-plus peer-reviewed publications in journals such as Nature, Science and Journal ofNeuroscience. A co-founder of Xalud Therapeutics, she is a world-renowned authority on theneurological applications of glial attenuation, focusing on alleviating chronic pain.

  • John Liebeskind Pain Management Research Award (2010)
  • Distinguished Professor, Psychology and Neuroscience
  • Co-Chair, Xalud Therapeutics Scientific Advisory Board

Faculty Leaders Impacting Humanity

Extraordinary Facilities and Resources

Key Departments, Institutes, Centers and Entities

  • Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
  • Chemistry and Biochemistry
  • Integrative Physiology

  • Psychology and Neuroscience
  • Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences

  • BioFrontiers Institute
  • Institute for Behavioral Genetics (IBG)
  • Institute of Cognitive Science (ICS)

Apply for Admission

Visit Campus

Support CUBoulder

Get Help

  • Safety & Health Services
  • COVID-19 Information

Getting Around

Information for

  • Faculty & Staff
  • Journalists

Initiatives

  • Free Speech
  • Understanding Your Cost of Attendance

Be Boulder.

University of Colorado Boulder

© 鶹Ժ
Contact Us•Privacy•Legal & Trademarks
Accessibility•Student Consumer Information• Land Acknowledgement •Policies• CU Boulder Jobs

Download theClery Act Annual Security &Fire safety report,orrequest a papercopyfromthe CUBoulderPolice Department.

Return to the top of the page