Rice to launch new doctoral program in systems, synthetic and physical biology

Starting in the fall of 2013, Rice will offer a new doctoral program in systems, synthetic and physical biology that was officially approved by the Rice Senate on Sept. 12. The program was originally envisioned by assistant professor of bioengineering Oleg Igoshin, professor of statistics Marek Kimmel, professor of biochemistry and cell biology Yousif Shamoo, and other professors from the Wiess School of Natural Sciences and the George R. Brown School of Engineering.

With foundations in quantitative and life sciences, the program aims to make important advances in bioscience with work from students and 34 faculty members who specialize in biology, chemistry, computer science, engineering, mathematics, statistics or physics. An additional goal is to expand research, according to Igoshin.

Another goal of the program is to enable us to do research we couldnt do before, SSPB Director Michael Deem said. We will have more students to work with, and we hope to attract additional funding from the federal government or from private foundations.

This program is the first of its kind in the United States, Igoshin said.

This is the first program in the country that has synthetic biology in its name, and this name is very much related to its foundation, Igoshin said. We see this new biology as a system: a whole with interacting parts.

The program will feature one core course open for undergraduate enrollment but will otherwise be exclusively open to graduate students. It will be highly selective because the faculty are looking to recruit eight first-year graduate students per year, Deem said.

According to Igoshin, the program will be highly interdisciplinary and will include faculty members from eight departments in the schools of engineering and natural sciences.

We observed [that] the large expansion of Rice faculty [who were] doing biology-related research were not necessarily from the biology department, but from computer science, statistics, biological and chemical engineering, Igoshin said. There was a good resource of talented people to create such a program.

According to Igoshin, this program is designed to develop a new approach toward the study of biology.

Read more here:
Rice to launch new doctoral program in systems, synthetic and physical biology

Related Posts

Comments are closed.