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¹û¶³Ó°Ôº Faculty of Life Sciences

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Research

The Faculty of Life Sciences is home to one of the most successful and productive groupings of biomedical researchers within Europe. Our research is leading the way when it comes to solving real problems and creating positive impact. Find out more about our top discoveries.

Top discoveries

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Browse research centres and departments by subject

Researcher holding a container with pink animal bones.

Biosciences

The ¹û¶³Ó°Ôº Division of Biosciences research isÌýmulti-disciplinary. Its activityÌýspans structural and molecular biology through cells and tissues to organisms, populations and the environment.Ìý


Neurons in the brain

Neuroscience

Two of the world’s leading neuroscience institutes are based in the faculty;ÌýtheÌýGatsby Computational Neuroscience UnitÌýand theÌý. There are also Neuroscience departments in the Division of Biosciences and the School of Pharmacy.Ìý

Cells under a microscope

LMCB

The ¹û¶³Ó°Ôº Laboratory for Molecular Cell Biology is a world-leading research institute studying cell and tissue function through interdisciplinary, discovery-based science and technology development.Ìý


Researcher looking at a 3D printed medicine with a 3D printer in the background.

Pharmacy

Research work within the ¹û¶³Ó°Ôº School of Pharmacy is organised into six research clusters. Research coversÌýPharmaceutical & Biological Chemistry, Pharmacology, Pharmaceutics, and Practice and Policy.

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Workers in rice field

Research impact

The impacts of our research have been recognised in the Research Excellence Framework 2021.
¹û¶³Ó°Ôº-Zeiss Multiscale Imaging Centre (UZMIC)

Our facilities

Discover the specialist facilities embedded within the faculty. 

covid 19

Response to COVID-19

Our research and expert opinion in response to COVID-19.

Latest research

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Meet the experts

Find out about our academics research and teaching interests, their journeys to ¹û¶³Ó°Ôº, and much more.

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Achievements and strengths

A highlight among the many achievements by FLS researchers was the award of the 2014 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine to Professor John O’Keefe. The Faculty is internationally recognized for its curiosity led and translational research in many life-science disciplines including neurosciences, genetics, structural, molecular, cellular, developmental, computational and environmental biology, biodiversity and drug discovery.

Among our greatest strengths is research addressing neural circuit development and function, how genomes encode phenotypes and the complex biochemical and molecular interactions that underpin cell functions and behaviours. Computational and modelling approaches are frequently conducted alongside experimental research programmes and much of our research spans across traditional disciplinary boundaries.Ìý