Academics

Graduate Programs

Programs in Biological Sciences

UCSF offers a rich variety of research opportunities in the biological sciences encompassing multiple different disciplines and departments. The graduate faculty at UCSF created the Herbert W. Boyer Program in Biological Sciences (PIBS) in order to give students access to the broadest possible range of research and to encourage interactions among faculty and students in different disciplines.

PIBS has allowed the creation of interdisciplinary graduate curricula rather than limiting students to studies in conventional departments. PIBS currently consists of distinct programs offering the Ph.D. degree: BiophysicsImmunologyNeuroscienceChemistry and Chemical BiologyDevelopmental and Stem Cell Biology, and the Tetrad program composed of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Cell Biology, Developmental Biology, and Genetics.

While the five Ph.D. programs differ in their emphasis and degree requirements, students admitted to any PIBS program can enroll in course work, attend retreats and carry out their thesis studies in any of the 150 labs affiliated with PIBS. Prospective students interested in PIBS should go to the links describing the individual graduate programs to determine which programs best fits their background and research interests.

Please follow the links above to learn more about the programs and faculty which participate in PIBS.

Biomedical Sciences (BMS) Graduate Program

Students enrolled in the Biomedical Sciences (BMS) Graduate Program will earn a PhD degree in Biomedical Sciences.  After completing the first-year core curriculum, students elect to follow one of eight thematic research areas within BMS as represented by our 250+ member laboratories. The curriculum is customized to a research area through choices of specific laboratory rotations, thesis lab, elective coursework, and participation in a thematic area's retreat, seminars, journal club, and other events, and may be customized to follow a more deeply translational path. During the first year in the program, students may rotate in any BMS-affiliated laboratory regardless of thematic area in order to allow flexibility in selecting a lab for thesis research.
The unique curriculum of the BMS program is designed to provide students with a wide range of opportunities for their development as biomedical researchers.

 

Post Doc Seminar Series 

Our quarterly seminar series offers an opportunity for Postdoctoral Scholars within the Department of Physiology to showcase their research findings to the broader Physiology community.

Past Presentations Includes: 

Iris Bachmutsky, PhD7/11/23Yackle LabCan you teach a mouse to hold its breath? 
Yuta Senzai, PhD10/26/23Scanziani Lab The eyes are windows into the dreaming brain
Michael Coulter, PhD 10/26/23Frank Lab Closed-loop modulation of hippocampal representations through neurofeedback 
Eric Schuppe, PhD 2/22/24Brainard Lab Inter-individual differences in correlated vocal phenotypes
George Lemieux, PhD2/22/24Ashrafi Lab Identifying a steroid signal that promotes learning
Anudari Letian, PhD4/25/24Goldberg Lab Neutrophils: The Overlooked Player in Atherosclerosis
Kai Li, PhD4/25/24Jan Lab Identifying a Lysosomal Mechanosensor
Hongfei Xu PhD10/24/24Edwards LabMechanism of Frequency-dependent Neurotransmitter Release
Fangming Xie, PhD10/24/24Jan LabHow visual experience regulates cell types in the visual cortex
Mohona Gupta, PhD4/15/25Delling LabPolycystin 1 Surface Expression and Channel Function: Dual Therapeutic Targets in ADPKD "ToloT".
Koki Tohara, PhD4/15/25Julius LabTopological Segregation of Stress Sensors Along the Gut Cript-Villus Axis
Shenliang Yu, PhD9/23/25Knight LabLarge-scale pooled CRIPSRi screening identified key modulators of intestinal nutrient sensing
Lin Yuan9/25/25Julius LabTuning sensory neuron resilience