School of Natural Sciences and Mathematics
Molecular Biology (B.S.)
The Biology Program at UT Dallas emphasizes the unifying molecular and cellular nature of organisms. At the center of the Biology undergraduate curriculum are the biochemical, genetic, and cell biology concepts and tools used to study the genes of prokaryotes and eukaryotes, to study the proteins and ribonucleic acids (RNA) encoded by these genes, and to study how the expression of these genes is regulated during the development and lifetimes of organisms. Molecular Biology represents a fusion of the four disciplines of biochemistry, biophysics, genetics, and cell biology. Modern biology requires a background in other disciplines such as chemistry, mathematics, physics, and computer sciences. Principles from these disciplines have to be merged to understand and apply new biotechnology and genetic engineering techniques. It is desirable for entering students to have a broad interest and background in the sciences.
Both B.S. and B.A. degrees are offered in Biology at UT Dallas; a B.S. degree is offered in Molecular Biology. The B.S. degrees are intended as preparation for scientific careers in biology or careers in the health professions. The B.A. degree is intended as liberal arts biology major with less emphasis on calculus and more free hours for course work in other disciplines. Each degree in Biology offers a streamlined double major with Business Administration or Crime and Justice Studies. Five-year Fast Track B.S. /M.S. Biology and Molecular Biology degree programs are available.
Minors are offered in Biology, Biomolecular Structure, Microbiology, Molecular and Cell Biology, and Neurobiology.
Faculty
Professors: Lee A. Bulla, Santosh D'Mello, Rockford K. Draper, Juan González, Steven R. Goodman, Donald M. Gray, Stephen D. Levene, Betty S. Pace, Lawrence J. Reitzer, Li Zhang, Michael Q. ZhangAssociate Professors: Gail A.M. Breen, John G. Burr, Jeff L. DeJong, Ernest M. Hannig, Dennis L. Miller
Assistant Professors: Tianbing Xia, Zhenyu Xuan
Professor Emeritus: Hans Bremer, Claud S. Rupert
Senior Lecturers: Irina Borovkov, Mehmet Candas, Vincent P. Cirillo, Wen-ju Lin, Robert C. Marsh, Ruben D. Ramirez, Scott A. Rippel, Ilya Sapozhnikov, Wen-Ho Yu,
Transfer Students
Students transferring into Biology or Molecular Biology at the junior level in either the B.S. or the B.A. programs are expected to have completed courses equivalent to:
- Introductory Biology with lab, BIOL 2311, 2312, and 2281
General Chemistry with lab, CHEM 1311, 1111, 1312, and 1112
Organic Chemistry with lab, CHEM 2323, 2123, 2325, and 2125
Calculus, MATH 2417 and 2419 (B.S. or B.A. degree); or Applied Calculus, MATH 1325, (B.A. degree only)
Physics with lab, calculus-based PHYS 2325, 2125, 2326 and 2126 (B.S. or B.A. degree); or algebra-based PHYS 1301, 1101, 1302, 1102 (B.A. degree only).
Junior-level transfer students deficient in these lower-division requirements may satisfy the requirements with courses taken at UT Dallas; however, students deficient in the biology and chemistry requirements may be delayed in entering upper-division biology courses.
Bachelor of Science in Molecular Biology Degree Requirements (129 hours)
I. Core Curriculum Requirements1: 41 hours
- Communication (6 hours)
- 3 hours Communication (RHET 1302)
- 3 hours Communication Elective (BIOL 4337, BIOL 4390, BIOL 4391, BIOL 4398, BIOL 4399 or NATS 4310)2
- Social and Behavioral Sciences (15 hours)
- 6 hours Government (GOVT 2301 and 2302)
- 6 hours American History
- 3 hours Social and Behavior Sciences Elective
- Humanities and Fine Arts (6 hours)
- 3 hours Fine Arts (ARTS 1301)
- 3 hours Humanities (HUMA 1301)
- Mathematics and Quantitative Reasoning (6 hours)
- 6 hours Calculus (MATH 2417 and 2419)3
- Science (9 hours)
- 9 hours Chemistry (CHEM 1311/1111, 1312/1112 and 2123)
1 Curriculum Requirements can be fulfilled by other approved courses from accredited institutions of higher education. The courses listed in parenthesis are recommended as the most efficient way to satisfy both Core Curriculum and Major requirements at UT Dallas.
II. Major Requirements: 68-69 hours
Major Preparatory Courses (20-21 hours beyond Core Curriculum)
- CHEM 1111 General Chemistry Laboratory I
CHEM 1112 General Chemistry Laboratory II
CHEM 1311 General Chemistry I
CHEM 1312 General Chemistry II
CHEM 2123* Introductory Organic Chemistry Laboratory I
CHEM 2125* Introductory Organic Chemistry Laboratory II
CHEM 2323* Introductory Organic Chemistry I
CHEM 2325* Introductory Organic Chemistry II
MATH 2417 Calculus I
MATH 2419 Calculus II
MATH 2418 Linear Algebra
PHYS 1101 Physics Laboratory I
PHYS 1102 Physics Laboratory II
PHYS 3341 Physics for Bio Science I
PHYS 3342 Physics for Bio Science II
Major Core Courses (36 hours)
- BIOL 2111* Introduction to Modern Biology Workshop I
BIOL 2112* Introduction to Modern Biology Workshop II
BIOL 2281* Introductory Biology Laboratory
BIOL 2311*Introduction to Modern Biology I
BIOL 2312* Introduction to Modern Biology II
BIOL 3101 Classical and Molecular Genetics Workshop
BIOL 3102 Eukaryotic Molecular and Cell Biology Workshop
BIOL 3161 Biochemistry Workshop I
BIOL 3162 Biochemistry Workshop II
BIOL 3301 Classical and Molecular Genetics
BIOL 3302 Eukaryotic Molecular and Cell Biology
BIOL 3361 Biochemistry I
BIOL 3362 Biochemistry II
or BIOL 3335 Microbial Physiology
BIOL 3380 Biochemistry Laboratory
BIOL 4380 Cell & Molecular Biology Laboratory
or BIOL 3V96 (3 hours) Undergraduate Research in Molecular and Cell Biology4
or BIOL 4399 (3 hours) Senior Honors Research in Molecular and Cell Biology4
or BIOL 4391 (3 hours) Senior Research in Molecular and Cell Biology 4
BIOL 4491 (3 Hours) Senior Research in Molecular and Cell Biology4
BIOL 4461 Biophysical Chemistry
Major Related Courses (12 hours) 5
12 hours upper-division approved molecular biology-related BIOL or CHEM electives
2 Molecular Biology majors may choose BIOL 4337, BIOL 4390, BIOL 4391, BIOL 4398, BIOL 4399, NATS 4310 or another approved Biology elective to fulfill the Core Curriculum Communication Elective.
3 Six hours of Calculus are counted under Mathematics Core, and 2 hours of Calculus are counted as Major Preparatory Courses.
4 These substitutes for BIOL 4380 require permission of the Biology Undergraduate Advisor to ensure equivalent training in recombinant DNA analysis.
5 Up to 6 hours of research may be used in fulfilling the major related course requirement.
* Indicates a prerequisite class to be completed before enrolling for upper-division classes.
III. Elective Requirements: 18-19 hours
Advanced Electives
All students are required to take at least six hours of advanced electives outside their major field of study. These must be either upper-division classes or lower-division classes that have prerequisites. These may be satisfied with CHEM 2323 and 2325, counted under Major Preparatory Courses.Free Electives (18-19 hours)
All students must complete at least 51 hours of upper-division credit to graduate.Minor in Biology
Course Requirements: 18 hours
- BIOL 2311/2111 Introduction to Modern Biology I with Workshop
BIOL 3301/3101 Classical and Molecular Genetics with Workshop
BIOL 3361/3161 Biochemistry I with Workshop
Minor in Biomolecular Structure
Course Requirements: 18 hours
- BIOL 3336 Protein and Nucleic Acid Structure
BIOL 4461 Biophysical Chemistry, unless taken to fulfill the Molecular Biology major requirements
BIOL 4261 Biomolecular Modeling
CHEM 2323 and 2325 Introductory Organic Chemistry I and II
Minor in Molecular and Cell Biology
Course Requirements: 18 hours
Four approved molecular and cell biology electivesMinor in Microbiology
Course Requirements: 18 hours
- BIOL 3V20 General Microbiology with Laboratory1
BIOL 3335 Microbial Physiology2
BIOL 4350 Medical Microbiology
or BIOL 4316 Parasites and Symbionts
BIOL 4345 Immunobiology
CHEM 2323 Introductory Organic Chemistry I
1Two hrs of BIOL 3V20 may be used to satisfy the upper level elctive requirement for Biology and Molecular Biology majors.
2 May be substituted with CHEM 2325 Introductory Chemistry II if used to satisfy the Biochemistry II core requirement for Biology and Molecular Biology majors.
Minor in Neurobiology
Course Requirements: 18 hours
- BIOL 4370 Developmental Neurobiology
BIOL 3371 Biology of the Brain
or NSC 4352 Cellular Neuroscience
CHEM 2323 and 2325 Introductory Organic Chemistry I and II
NSC 4353 Neuroscience Laboratory Methods
NSC 4354 Integrative Neuroscience
Fast Track Baccalaureate/Master’s Degrees
UT Dallas undergraduate students with strong academic records, including at least 15 hours of upper-division Biology core courses, who intend to pursue graduate work in Biology at UT Dallas, may apply for the Fast Track which involves taking selected graduate courses as an upper-division student. After admission to the graduate program, 15 hours of graduate courses with an earned grade of B or better can be used toward completion of the B.S. and to satisfy requirements for those courses at the graduate level. Graduate courses must be approved by the graduate advisor. This program provides an opportunity to obtain the B.S. degree in Biology after 124 hours of work and an M.S. degree in Molecular and Cell Biology after an additional 21 hours of graduate course and research work. Interested students should contact the Biology undergraduate advisor well in advance of the senior year to prepare a degree plan taking maximal advantage of this 5-year Fast Track program.
Degree Planning
Upper-division biology courses taken at other institutions may be included as part of the degree plan subject to the provisions of the section on Transfer Admissions.
Major-related courses may not include more than 9 hours (B.S.) or 6 hours (B.A.) of upper-division transfer credit and not more than 3 hours (Biology major) or 6 hours (Molecular Biology major) of individual instruction (e.g., BIOL 3V90, BIOL 3V91, BIOL 3V92, BIOL 3V95, BIOL 3V96, BIOL 4302, BIOL 4390, BIOL 4391, BIOL 4398, BIOL 4399, BIOL 4V98, or BIOL 4V99).
Students planning a career in a particular allied health profession should consult the school they expect to attend to apprise themselves of the course requirements for admission.
Admission standards for medical and dental schools are set by the individual professional school, whose specific requirements should be reviewed with the help of the UT Dallas Health Professions Education Advisors. Most professional schools prefer that admission applications be channeled through the Health Professions Education Office.Molecular Biology and Business Administration(B.S.)
The Biology Program at UT Dallas emphasizes the unifying molecular and cellular nature of organisms. At the center of the Biology undergraduate curriculum are the biochemical, genetic, and cell biology concepts and tools used to study the genes of prokaryotes and eukaryotes, to study the proteins and ribonucleic acids (RNA) encoded by these genes, and to study how the expression of these genes is regulated during the development and lifetimes of organisms. Molecular Biology represents a fusion of the four disciplines of biochemistry, biophysics, genetics, and cell biology. Modern biology requires a background in other disciplines such as chemistry, mathematics, physics, and computer sciences. Principles from these disciplines have to be merged to understand and apply new biotechnology and genetic engineering techniques. It is desirable for entering students to have a broad interest and background in the sciences.
Both B.S. and B.A. degrees are offered in Biology at UT Dallas; a B.S. degree is offered in Molecular Biology. The B.S. degrees are intended as preparation for scientific careers in biology or careers in the health professions. The B.A. degree is intended as liberal arts biology major with less emphasis on calculus and more free hours for course work in other disciplines. Each degree in Biology offers a streamlined double major with Business Administration or Crime and Justice Studies. Five-year Fast Track B.S. /M.S. Biology and Molecular Biology degree programs are available.
Minors are offered in Biology, Biomolecular Structure, Microbiology, Molecular and Cell Biology, and Neurobiology.
Faculty
Professors: Lee A. Bulla, Santosh D'Mello, Rockford K. Draper, Juan González, Steven R. Goodman, Donald M. Gray, Stephen D. Levene, Betty S. Pace, Lawrence J. Reitzer, Li Zhang, Michael Q. Zhang
Associate Professors: Gail A.M. Breen, John G. Burr, Jeff L. DeJong, Ernest M. Hannig, Dennis L. Miller
Assistant Professors: Tianbing Xia, Zhenyu Xuan
Professor Emeritus: Hans Bremer, Claud S. Rupert
Senior Lecturers: Irina Borovkov, Mehmet Candas, Vincent P. Cirillo, Wen-ju Lin, Robert C. Marsh, Ruben D. Ramirez, Scott A. Rippel, Ilya Sapozhnikov, Wen-Ho Yu
Transfer Students
Students transferring into Biology or Molecular Biology at the junior level in either the B.S. or the B.A. programs are expected to have completed courses equivalent to:
- Introductory Biology with lab, BIOL 2311, 2312, and 2281
General Chemistry with lab, CHEM 1311, 1111, 1312, and 1112
Organic Chemistry with lab, CHEM 2323, 2123, 2325, and 2125
Calculus, MATH 2417 and 2419 (B.S. or B.A. degree); or Applied Calculus, MATH 1325, (B.A. degree only)
Physics with lab, calculus-based PHYS 2325, 2125, 2326 and 2126 (B.S. or B.A. degree); or algebra-based PHYS 1301, 1101, 1302, 1102 (B.A. degree only).
Junior-level transfer students deficient in these lower-division requirements may satisfy the requirements with courses taken at UT Dallas; however, students deficient in the biology and chemistry requirements may be delayed in entering upper-division biology courses.
Bachelor of Science in Molecular Biology and Business Administration
Degree Requirements (Double Major: 140 hours)
I. Core Curriculum Requirements1: 42 hours
- Communication (6 hours)
- 3 hours Communication (RHET 1302)
- 3 hours Communication Elective (BA 3311)2
- Social and Behavioral Sciences (15 hours)
- 6 hours Government (GOVT 2301 and 2302)
- 6 hours American History
- 3 hours Social and Behavior Sciences Elective (ECON 2301)2
- Humanities and Fine Arts (6 hours)
- 3 hours Fine Arts (ARTS 1301)
- 3 hours Humanities (HUMA 1301)
- Mathematics and Quantitative Reasoning (6 hours)
- 6 hours Calculus (MATH 2417 and 2419)3
- Science (9 hours)
- 9 hours Chemistry (CHEM 1311/1111, 1312/1112 and 2123)
1 Curriculum Requirements can be fulfilled by other approved courses from accredited institutions of higher education. The courses listed in parenthesis are recommended as the most efficient way to satisfy both Core Curriculum and Major requirements at UT Dallas.
II. Major Requirements: 86 hours
Biology Major Preparatory Courses (17 hours beyond Core Curriculum)
- CHEM 1111 General Chemistry Laboratory I
CHEM 1112 General Chemistry Laboratory II
CHEM 1311 General Chemistry I
CHEM 1312 General Chemistry II
CHEM 2123* Introductory Organic Chemistry Laboratory I
CHEM 2125* Introductory Organic Chemistry Laboratory II
CHEM 2323* Introductory Organic Chemistry I
CHEM 2325*Introductory Organic Chemistry II
MATH 2417 Calculus I3
MATH 2419 Calculus II3
PHYS 3341/1101 Physics for Bio Science I with Laboratory
PHYS 3342/1102 Physics for Bio Science II with Laboratory
Biology Major Core Courses (33 hours)
- BIOL 2111* Introduction to Modern Biology Workshop I
BIOL 2112* Introduction to Modern Biology Workshop II
BIOL 2281* Introductory Biology Laboratory
BIOL 2311* Introduction to Modern Biology I
BIOL 2312* Introduction to Modern Biology II
BIOL 3101 Classical and Molecular Genetics Workshop
BIOL 3102 Eukaryotic Molecular and Cell Biology Workshop
BIOL 3161 Biochemistry Workshop I
BIOL 3162 Biochemistry Workshop II
BIOL 3301 Classical and Molecular Genetics
BIOL 3302 Eukaryotic Molecular and Cell Biology
BIOL 3361 Biochemistry I
BIOL 3362 Biochemistry II
or BIOL 3335 Microbial Physiology
BIOL 3380 Biochemistry Laboratory
BIOL 4461 Biophysical Chemistry
Business Administration Major Preparatory Courses (15 hours beyond Core Curriculum)
- AIM 2301* Introductory Financial Accounting
AIM 2302* Introductory Management Accounting
BA 2301* Business and Public Law
ECON 2301* Principles of Macroeconomics2
ECON 2302* Principles of Microeconomics
MATH 2333* Matrices, Vectors and Their Application
Business Administration Core Courses (21 hours)
-
BA 3311 Business Communications2
BA 3341 Business Finance
BA 3351 Introduction to Management Information Systems
BA 3352 Production Management
BA 3361 Organizational Behavior
BA 3365 Principles of Marketing
BA 4305 Strategic Management2
BA 4371 International Business
STAT 3360 Probability and Statistics for Management and Economics
or STAT 3332 Statistics for Life Sciences
2 A required Major course that also fulfills a Core Curriculum requirement. Hours are counted in Core Curriculum.
3 Six hours of Calculus are counted under Mathematics Core, and 2 hours of Calculus are counted as Major Preparatory Courses.
* Indicates a prerequisite class to be completed before enrolling for upper-division classes.
III. Elective Requirements: 12 hours
Advanced Electives
All students are required to take at least six hours of advanced electives outside their major field of study. These must be either upper-division classes or lower-division classes that have prerequisites. These may be satisfied with CHEM 2323 and 2325, counted under Major Preparatory Courses.Guided Electives (12 hours)
Business Administration (9 hours): To be selected from AIM and BA courses.Biology (3 hours): To be selected from BIOL 4380, BIOL 3V96 (3 hours)4 , BIOL 43914 or BIOL 4399 (3 hours)4
All students must complete at least 51 hours of upper-division credit to graduate.
4 Requires permission of the Biology Undergraduate Advisor to ensure training in recombinant DNA analysis.
Bachelor of Science in Molecular Biology and Criminology
Degree Requirements (Double Major: 128-129 hours)
I. Core Curriculum Requirements1
- Communication (6 hours)
- 3 hours Communication (RHET 1302)
- 3 hours Communication Elective (BIOL 4337, BIOL 4390, BIOL 4391, BIOL 4398, BIOL 4399, CRIM 3300, or NATS 4310)2
- Social and Behavioral Sciences (15 hours)
- 6 hours Government (GOVT 2301 and 2302)
- 6 hours American History
- 3 hours Social and Behavior Sciences Elective (ECON 2301 or 2302)3
- Humanities and Fine Arts (6 hours)
- 3 hours Fine Arts (ARTS 1301)
- 3 hours Humanities (HUMA 1301)
- Mathematics and Quantitative Reasoning (6 hours)
- 6 hours Calculus (MATH 2417 and 2419)4
- Science (9 hours)
- 9 hours Chemistry (CHEM 1311/1111, 1312/1112 and 2123)
1 Curriculum Requirements can be fulfilled by other approved courses from accredited institutions of higher education. The courses listed in parenthesis are recommended as the most efficient way to satisfy both Core Curriculum and Major requirements at UT Dallas.
II. Major Requirements: 77-78 hours
Biology Major Preparatory Courses (20-21 hours beyond Core Curriculum)
- CHEM 1111 General Chemistry Laboratory I
CHEM 1112 General Chemistry Laboratory II
CHEM 1311 General Chemistry I
CHEM 1312 General Chemistry II
CHEM 2123* Introductory Organic Chemistry Laboratory I
CHEM 2125* Introductory Organic Chemistry Laboratory II
CHEM 2323* Introductory Organic Chemistry I
CHEM 2325* Introductory Organic Chemistry II
MATH 2417 Calculus I 3
MATH 2419 Calculus II 3
MATH 2418 Linear Algebra
or STAT 3332 Statistics for Life Sciences
or SOCS 3405 Introduction to Social Statistics with Lab
PHYS 3341/1101 Physics for Bio Science I with Laboratory
PHYS 3342/1102 Physics for Bio Science II with Laboratory
Biology Major Core Courses (36 hours)
- BIOL 2111* Introduction to Modern Biology Workshop I
BIOL 2112* Introduction to Modern Biology Workshop II
BIOL 2281* Introductory Biology Laboratory
BIOL 2311* Introduction to Modern Biology I
BIOL 2312* Introduction to Modern Biology II
BIOL 3101 Classical and Molecular Genetics Workshop
BIOL 3102 Eukaryotic Molecular and Cell Biology Workshop
BIOL 3161 Biochemistry Workshop I
BIOL 3162 Biochemistry Workshop II
BIOL 3301 Classical and Molecular Genetics
BIOL 3302 Eukaryotic Molecular and Cell Biology
BIOL 3318 Forensic Biology
BIOL 3361 Biochemistry I
BIOL 3362 Biochemistry II
or BIOL 3335 Microbial Physiology
BIOL 3380 Biochemistry Laboratory
BIOL 4461 Biophysical Chemistry
Crime and Justice Studies Major Preparatory Course (No hours beyond Core Curriculum)
Crime and Justice Studies Core Courses (18 hours)
- CRIM 3300 Crime and Civil Liberties
CRIM 3301 Theories of Justice
or another Social Science course with a distributive justice emphasis such as SOC 4361 Law and Society,
or ECON 4320 Public Sector Economics
CRIM 3302 Advanced Criminology
CRIM 3303 Advanced Criminal Justice
CRIM 3304 Research Methods in Crime and Justice Studies
CRIM 3319 Comparative Justice Systems
CRIM 4305 Social Control and Criminal Sanctions
CRIM 4321 Senior Research Seminar
2 Double majors may choose BIOL 4337, BIOL 4390, BIOL 4391, BIOL 4398, BIOL 4399, CRIM 3301, PSCI 3325, NATS 4310 or another approved Biology elective to fulfill the Core Curriculum Communication Elective.
3 A required Major course that also fulfills a Core Curriculum requirement. Hours are counted in Core Curriculum.
4 Six hours of Calculus are counted under Mathematics Core, and 2 hours of Calculus are counted as Major Preparatory Courses.
* Indicates a prerequisite class to be completed before enrolling for upper-division classes.
III. Elective Requirements: 12 hours
Advanced Electives
All students are required to take at least six hours of advanced electives outside their major field of study. These must be either upper-division classes or lower-division classes that have prerequisites. These may be satisfied with CHEM 2323 and 2325, counted under Major Preparatory Courses.
Guided Electives (12 hours)
Crime and Justice Studies and Related Electives (9 hours): All students must complete at least 51 hours of upper-division credit to graduate.
Biology (3 hours): To be selected from BIOL 4380, BIOL 3V96 (3 hours)5, BIOL 4391 or BIOL 4399 (3 hours) 5
All students must complete at least 51 hours of upper-division credit to graduate.
5 Requires permission of the Biology Undergraduate Advisor to ensure training in recombinant DNA analysis.

