Why Iowa?

Our students aren’t passive learners. At Iowa, you’ll go inside the lab and contribute to world-renowned research working alongside faculty experts to explore the diverse realms of the biological sciences.

Undergraduate programs

iBio Graduate Program

Faculty

Why study here?

Whether you aspire to be a research scientist, professor, physician, forensic scientist, biotechnologist, public health professional, natural resource expert, science communicator, or so much more — Iowa’s Department of Biology will prepare you to take your next step through courses, experiential learning, and engagement in research.

Research

Bin Z. He portrait

Stresses strengthen disease-causing yeast

Biologists at the University of Iowa have found that C. glabrata, after being exposed to a mild stress, becomes more resistant to hydrogen peroxide, a chemical weapon employed by the human immune system to eliminate infecting microbes. The biologists further learned that this exposure-to-resistance escalation in C. glabrata does not appear in its close relative, the benign Saccharomyces cerevisiae, also known as brewer’s or baker’s yeast.

Portrait of John Manak

Biologists show how brain’s immune system response worsens epilepsy

In a new study, the researchers lay out a chain of events that can cause seizures—the most common manifestation of epilepsy—to worsen. The sequence begins when oxidative stress in the body causes the brain’s immune system to react. That activation by the brain’s resident immune cells (called glia) triggers more severe seizures.

Brian Berger working in a lab

Iowa antibody bank stands ready to fight the next pandemic

On the corner of Dubuque Street and Iowa Avenue, just a block east from the Old Capitol, thousands of possible clues toward deciphering human diseases are stored in liquid nitrogen. Floating in glass tubes, the hybridomas—cell lines used to create antibodies, the foundational pieces of human and animal immunity—hold clues to how our brains work and our muscles develop. They point the way to treatments for emerging viruses that have yet to be named. They could even help combat a future pandemic.

News and announcements

iBio PhD Student Successfully Defends Dissertation

Saturday, March 7, 2026
Congratulations to iBio graduate student, Sehee Min, on successfully defending her dissertation!

Biology Professor Receives 2025 IDEA Award

Sunday, March 1, 2026
Biology Professor, Maurine Neiman, is the 2025 recipient of the IDEA Award given to a person at any career stage who has strengthened the ecology and evolutionary biology community by promoting access and inclusiveness in the fields of the ASN, SSE, and SSB.

An Interview with Biology Professor Bin Z. HE

Monday, February 23, 2026
Get to know Biology professor, Bin Z. HE, in this interview with him.
biology students on site

$6M

Faculty in the Department of Biology received more than $6 million in grant funding in 2023.
students walking down hallway in Biology building

55 %

of undergraduate students participated in research outside of regular course assignments.

(2017 data)

student at a microscope

1,040

More than 1,000 students are enrolled as biology undergraduate majors at Iowa.

Events

Biology Seminar: "Transcriptional regulation by a fast-evolving RNA scaffold in cancer and development" promotional image

Biology Seminar: "Transcriptional regulation by a fast-evolving RNA scaffold in cancer and development"

Monday, April 6, 2026 4:00pm
Biology Building East
Yikang Rong, Ph.D., a Visiting Scholar (Helen C. Levitt Visiting Endowed Professorship) in Lori Wallrath's lab in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at the University of Iowa, will be giving a seminar on Monday, April 6, at 4:00pm in Kollros Auditorium (Room 101), Biology Building East (BBE).

Sci-Fi Flix: Fact or Fiction "The Martian"

Tuesday, April 7, 2026 6:30pm to 9:00pm
Seamans Center

Join us for an out-of-this-world movie experience as we screen "The Martian" (2015) and explore the science behind the story. Is surviving on Mars really possible? Could you grow potatoes in Martian soil? How accurate are the physics, engineering, and geology portrayed on screen?

Enjoy expert commentary from NASA-affiliated experts in engineering, physics and astronomy, and geology as they break down what’s fact and what’s fiction in this sci-fi classic. Bring your curiosity, questions, and love...

Lunch with a NASA Scientist: A Conversation with Dr. Jim Green

Wednesday, April 8, 2026 12:00pm to 1:00pm
Sciences Library

Have lunch with Dr. Jim Green, retired NASA Chief Scientist and Iowa alum, as he discusses his remarkable career leading planetary missions from Pluto to Jupiter to Mars. Enjoy pizza and stories from inside NASA. Join us as he shares insights into scientific leadership, exploration, and what it takes to push the boundaries of discovery.

Co-sponsored by the Lichtenberger Engineering Library, Sciences Library, Engineering Career Services, and NEXUS.

Biology Master's Thesis Seminar: "The Role of ATP in Pathological and Physiological Aggregation" promotional image

Biology Master's Thesis Seminar: "The Role of ATP in Pathological and Physiological Aggregation"

Wednesday, April 8, 2026 3:00pm
Biology Building East
Maisie Laughlin, a Master's candidate in the Integrated Biology (iBio) Graduate Program, will be defending her thesis on Wednesday, April 8, at 3:00pm in Room 106, Biology Building East (BBE).
View more events

Seminars

Biology Seminar: "Transcriptional regulation by a fast-evolving RNA scaffold in cancer and development" promotional image

Biology Seminar: "Transcriptional regulation by a fast-evolving RNA scaffold in cancer and development"

Monday, April 6, 2026 4:00pm
Biology Building East
Yikang Rong, Ph.D., a Visiting Scholar (Helen C. Levitt Visiting Endowed Professorship) in Lori Wallrath's lab in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at the University of Iowa, will be giving a seminar on Monday, April 6, at 4:00pm in Kollros Auditorium (Room 101), Biology Building East (BBE).
Biology Master's Thesis Seminar: "The Role of ATP in Pathological and Physiological Aggregation" promotional image

Biology Master's Thesis Seminar: "The Role of ATP in Pathological and Physiological Aggregation"

Wednesday, April 8, 2026 3:00pm
Biology Building East
Maisie Laughlin, a Master's candidate in the Integrated Biology (iBio) Graduate Program, will be defending her thesis on Wednesday, April 8, at 3:00pm in Room 106, Biology Building East (BBE).
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Seminar: Dr. Michael Lagunoff promotional image

Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Seminar: Dr. Michael Lagunoff

Thursday, April 9, 2026 10:30am to 11:20am
Medical Education Research Facility

This event is open to the public.

Alteration of cellular metabolism and lipids by the oncogenic virus, KSHV

Michael Lagunoff, PhD
MCB Graduate Program
University of Washington

Lagunoff Lab | https://faculty.washington.edu/lagunoff/#/

Faculty Co-Hosts: Miles Pufall, PhD and Jessica Tucker, PhD