

BSc Immunology and Pharmacology
About this course
Immunology and pharmacology are two of the most clinically consequential branches of biomedical science. Immunology examines the immune system's extraordinary capacity to detect and respond to infection, to distinguish self from non-self, and to maintain or fail to maintain equilibrium between protection and self-destruction. Understanding these mechanisms has transformed medicine, underpinning vaccination, organ transplantation, blood transfusion, the treatment of allergy, and the remarkable recent advances in immunotherapy for cancer. Pharmacology is the science of how drugs act on biological systems, concerned with the mechanisms by which molecules alter cellular and physiological function, how drugs are absorbed, distributed, metabolised, and excreted, and how therapeutic effects and adverse reactions are produced. Together, the two disciplines sit at the scientific foundations of drug discovery and modern clinical medicine. At the University of Strathclyde, this four-year full-time degree with a year abroad develops both disciplines to a high level, producing graduates with the depth of understanding in both immune biology and drug action needed for careers in research, the pharmaceutical industry, and clinical science. You will study the cellular and molecular mechanisms of immune function, including how autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and type 1 diabetes arise when immune tolerance breaks down, alongside the pharmacological principles governing how drugs are designed to modulate those and other biological processes. Laboratory work is central to the degree, developing the practical skills in cell culture, molecular biology, and pharmacological assay that research and industry careers require. The year abroad provides the opportunity to study in another country's biomedical research environment. Graduates are well positioned for careers in pharmaceutical research and development, biotechnology, clinical research organisations, medical devices, regulatory affairs, and academic research. The combination of immunological and pharmacological expertise is particularly valuable in the rapidly growing fields of biologics, immunotherapy, and precision medicine, where deep knowledge of both drug mechanisms and immune biology is at a premium. Many graduates continue to postgraduate research at MSc or PhD level, building the specialist expertise needed for senior research, regulatory, or clinical science roles.
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