Welcome to
Biomedical Engineering

95%

Of Ph.D. students are fully funded

2,000+

Texas Biomedical Engineering alumni around the world

81%

Of undergraduate students participate in research

Jennifer Maynard

Professor

ZD Bonner Professorship of Chemical Engineering

Research Focus

Biotechnology, protein therapeutics, vaccine development, applied immunology and microbiology.

Research Interests

We develop protein therapeutics and vaccines to address unmet medical needs in infectious diseases. These proteins aim to directly interfere in disease progression or augment essential immune system activities. To do this, we design a candidate protein, with an emphasis on engineering the kinetics with which it interacts with other proteins as well as targeting protein transport to specific tissues in the body. This is followed by protein expression and purification to make the protein; biophysical, biochemical and cellular analyses to elucidate the molecular basis of activity; and, ultimately, in vitro and in vivo experiments to evaluate the protein’s ability to prevent disease.

Our specific research goals are to:

  • Understand mechanisms of protective immunity and use this information to engineer more effective vaccines and therapeutics.
  • Reverse engineer pathogenic strategies used by bacterial pathogens for biomedical and biotechnological applications.
  • Control cellular immunity through manipulation of T cell receptor-peptide MHC interactions.
  • Apply protein engineering approaches to issues in structural biology.

Awards & Honors

  • National Academy of Inventors (NAI), Senior Member, 2023
  • Fellow of the American Institute of Medical and Biological Engineers, 2017
  • Inaugural University of Texas “Emerging Inventor of the Year” Award, 2015
  • Bill & Melinda Gates Grand Challenge Awards, 2009, 2016
  • Texas Exes Teaching Award for the Cockrell School of Engineering, 2012
  • Most Outstanding Professor in Chemical Engineering, Student Engineering Council, 2010
  • Packard Fellowship, David and Lucile Packard Foundation, 2005
  • Dreyfus New Faculty Award, 2003
  • National Research Service Award, National Institutes of Heatlh (NIH), 2002-2004

Department Research Areas:

Selected Publications

 

Upcoming Events

Thursday, May 01

Community Conversations

3:30PM - 4:30PM

Tuesday, May 13

Targeting stromal cells for immuno-engineering

10:00AM - 11:00AM

News

A group of biomedical engineering graduate students work in a lab.

Biomedical Engineering Graduate Program Among Top 20 in U.S. Yet Again

The University of Texas at Austin’s Department of Biomedical Engineering graduate program ranked No. 19 in U.S. News & World Report’s 2025-2026 graduate engineering program rankings, released on Tuesday.

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FRI Biobricks and Microbe Hackers stream students work in the lab.

Pharmacoengineering Program Enables Advanced Drug Development and Delivery

Graduate students at The University of Texas at Austin have a new opportunity to revolutionize how medicines are developed and delivered. The graduate portfolio program in pharmacoengineering is an interdisciplinary effort that bridges expertise in pharmaceutics, chemistry, engineering, biochemistry, biologics and drug metabolism.

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5 Questions With Jeongwook "Luke" Yun: An Austin Inno Under 25 Recipient

Jeongwook “Luke” Yun, a senior in The University of Texas at Austin's Department of Biomedical Engineering, is being recognized for his passion, dedication and transformative work involving the intersection between artificial intelligence (AI) and health care.

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Research Areas

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