The Department of Anatomy and Regenerative Biology is home to some of the University's leading educators and researchers.
As a traditional anatomy department, educational efforts are directed toward undergraduate courses in gross anatomy, microscopic anatomy, and neurobiology for medical, health sciences, physical therapy, and basic science students.
As a modern biomedical research department, faculty members direct NIH-funded projects, with a focus on molecular, cellular, developmental, and physiological aspects in the field of stem cell and regenerative biology.
Research-active faculty belong to the University's interdisciplinary graduate program in biomedical sciences, which leads to Ph.D. degrees in Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, Molecular Medicine, or Microbiology and Immunology.
The Department is located in Walter G. Ross Hall on the main campus of the University in the historic Foggy Bottom neighborhood of Washington, DC, just two blocks from the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and five blocks from the White House.
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