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Microbiology Fast Facts

The Department of Microbiology is one of eight basic science departments at UMass Chan Medical School.

Microbiology houses more than 100 researchers, including faculty, postdoctoral and doctoral trainees, undergraduate students, and summer interns. An expert administrative team works tirelessly in support of the research and educational efforts.

Microbiology researchers use multidisciplinary approaches that integrate genomics, proteomics, high-resolution imaging and computational methods to characterize networks of microbe-host interactions at the molecular, cellular and organismal levels. Comparisons of such networks with those that define normal physiology fosters the development of computational models that simulate infection and innovative approaches to disease-specific diagnostics, prognostics and therapeutics.

Take a virtual tour of UMass Chan Medical School here.

The Microbiology department is home to two Core Facilities for the UMass Chan campus: the SCOPE light microscopy core (directed by Microbiology faculty Dr. Christina Baer), and the Flow Cytometry core (directed by Microbiology faculty Dr. Carol Schrader). Microbiology also benefits from interactions with more than 45 other core facilities on the UMass Chan campus (including BSL-3 Facility, Animal Imaging, IVIS, Tissue Culture Services, Bioinformatics, RNAi Screening and Deep Sequencing).

Our research space includes:

  • State-of-the-art and green BSL-2 laboratory space to accommodate up to 25 principal investigators
  • Two BSL-3 research facilities
  • Six tissue culture rooms
  • Four cold rooms
  • State-of-the-art microscopy suite
  • Four conference rooms equipped for remote and in-person meetings
  • Open social space to promote informal interactions and free exchange of ideas
  • Study areas for researchers
  • Business administrative areas

Microbiology hosts the Program in Microbiome Dynamics.

Every year, Microbiology hosts the Fred Fay Memorial Lecture, a series of seminars by leaders in biological research, which honors the late Dr. Frederic S. Fay.