Metadata
Title
Systems Biology Major
Category
general
UUID
8a6b7412971b4dc4a33ad740dd12e18c
Source URL
https://www.bioquant.uni-heidelberg.de/education/systems-biology
Parent URL
https://www.bio.uni-heidelberg.de/en/study-and-teaching/study-programmes/master-...
Crawl Time
2026-03-11T05:58:11+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Systems Biology Major

Source: https://www.bioquant.uni-heidelberg.de/education/systems-biology Parent: https://www.bio.uni-heidelberg.de/en/study-and-teaching/study-programmes/master-of-science-molecular-biosciences

Following the identification of the parts of biological systems, the interdisciplinary field of systems biology combines quantitative data generation and mathematical modelling to elucidate general principles governing emergent properties of complex systems that give rise to biological functions. Due to the non-linearity of relationships in biological networks it is not possible to deduce function from the properties of individual molecules but rather by considering the dynamic interplay of systems components.

Major open questions are:

The approach of systems biology is fuelled by tremendous advances in high-throughput data generation and in the analysis at the single cell level in combination with the development of suitable modelling tools. Systems biology facilitates the establishment of new paradigms and the identification of targets for efficient intervention. Thereby, it holds outstanding promise for biomedical research, which is a major topic in Heidelberg.

The Major Systems Biology covers fundamental topics in cell biology, molecular biology, dynamic pathway, as well as multi-scale modelling, bioinformatics and computational analysis. In-depth training in multi-disciplinary approaches will be provided by lectures, tutorials and seminars that are accompanied by practical courses. Thereby, the Major Systems Biology uniquely prepares students for developing novel strategies to address key questions in biological systems.

More information about Systems Biology in general can be found on the website: www.systembiologie.de. Although the site is in German, some of the digital magazines mentioned there are in English.

Program Directors

Prof. Dr. Ursula Kummer

BioQuant

+49 (0)6221 54-51278

ursula.kummer@bioquant.uni-heidelberg.de

Prof. Dr. Ursula Klingmüller

BioQuant & DKFZ

+49 (0)6221 42-4481

u.klingmueller@dkfz-heidelberg.de

Program Coordinator

Dr. Victor Winter

Centre for Organismal Studies (COS)

+49 (0)6221 54-6153

winter@uni-heidelberg.de

Staff and Research Groups

These groups are associated to the Systems Biology major. Students are very welcome to do a traineeship or write their master's thesis with one of these groups. Please check the different websites to find out more about the research themes and the specific contact details.

Research Group Group Leader
Biostatistics forOmics Data Simon Anders
Complex Adaptive Traits(CATs)in beneficialBacilli Ilka Bischofs
AdvancedBiological Screening Facility Holger Erfle
Division of Theoretical Systems Biology Thomas Höfer
Ecology and evolution of mobile DNA Supriya Khedkar
Division of Systems Biology of Signal Transduction Ursula Klingmüller
Modelling of Biological Processes Ursula Kummer
Applied Analysis and Modelling in Biosciences Anna Marciniak
Biological Information Processing Group Jürgen Pahle
ChromatinNetworks Karsten Rippe
Biomedical Computer Vision Karl Rohr
Protein Evolution Rob Russell
Systems Biomedicine Julio Saez-Rodriguez
Spatial omics technologies and analysis Denis Schapiro
Cryo Electron Microscopy Rasmus Schröder
Tumour Metabolism and Microenvironment Almut Schulze
Molecular Mechanisms ofIntracellularTrafficking Vytaute Starkuviene-Erfle
Computational Biomedical Discovery Jovan Tanevski
Institut für Pharmazie und Molekulare Biotechnologie Abteilung Pharmazeutische Biologie Stefan Wölfl

Coordinator Insights

Prof. Dr. Ursula Kummer

"Systems biology research requires a structural rethinking. Scientists from the lab and model builders have to get together to learn from each other"

Prof. Dr. Ursula Klingmüller

"Biological systems are very complex. It is not sufficient to focus solely on individual components but rather they have to be put in context to understand how emergent properties such as cellular decisions arise. Therefore interdisciplinary approaches combining theoretical and experimental techniques will be of increasing importance to address big questions in basic and translational research."

Master in Molecular Biosciences
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