

BSc Human Embryology and Developmental Biology
About this course
Human embryology and developmental biology examine the most foundational questions in biology: how a single fertilised cell becomes a complex, differentiated organism. This is one of the most remarkable processes in nature, involving intricate molecular signalling, coordinated cell division and migration, and the progressive specification of the hundreds of distinct cell types that make up a human body. Understanding how development works, and how it can go wrong, is central to medicine, to reproductive science, to our understanding of genetic disease, and to the development of new regenerative therapies. At the University of Aberdeen, this four-year programme takes a specialised and rigorous approach to developmental biology with a particular focus on human embryology. You will study the molecular and cellular mechanisms that control development, including gene regulation, cell signalling pathways, stem cell biology, and organ formation. The programme connects developmental biology to clinical and biomedical applications, exploring how defects in developmental processes lead to congenital conditions and how an understanding of development informs approaches to tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. Aberdeen has research strengths in reproductive biology and developmental science, and you will be studying in an environment where these questions are actively investigated. This full-time programme runs over four years and includes a year abroad, giving you the opportunity to experience developmental biology research or teaching in a different international setting. Graduates in developmental biology go on to careers in academic research, the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries, clinical embryology in fertility medicine, healthcare science, science communication, and science policy. Many graduates proceed to postgraduate research degrees, contributing to the fast-moving science of development and regeneration. The combination of deep biological knowledge and transferable analytical skills that the programme develops opens a wide range of professional pathways.
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