The Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences aims to be recognised nationally and internationally as a leader in pharmaceutical research and education. We promote the discovery, development, and appropriate use of medications for the welfare and the safety of the public.

The range of topics in Pharmaceutical Sciences aims at the identification and the characterisation of both new biologically active natural products and synthetic drugs and at understanding of their interactions with human targets on a molecular level using in silico, in vitro, and in vivo models.

Based on this knowledge, new lead compounds and disease relevant targets are investigated and delivery systems for pharmaceutical active ingredients are developed.

 News & Events

07.12.2023 11:30
 

An exciting lecture as part of the Department Meeting, by Prof. Daniel Merk, LMU Munich, Germany

16.11.2023 11:30
 

An exciting lecture as part of the Department Meeting, by Prof. Varpu Marjomäki, University of Jyväskylä, Finland

09.11.2023 11:30
 

An exciting lecture as part of the Department Meeting, by Emily Jean Kate Ph.D, University of Vienna, Austria

02.11.2023
 

As part of this year’s Pharmacy Day, Stella Neubauer and Hannah Vera Breuß received the ÖPhG-Pharma-Bachelor Award. Johanna Poglitsch and David Steiner were awarded with the Maria-Kuhnert-Brandstätter Award, and Remo Eugster received the Gottfried-Heinisch Award. The awards were sponsored by the Austrian Pharmaceutical Society (ÖPhG) and were handed over by their president Helmut Viernstein. Congratulations!

24.10.2023
 

Congratulations to Sabrina Grundtner (PhD student, laboratory of Manuela Schmidt) for being awarded the "Best Oral Poster Communication"-Prize at the 13th Congress of the European Pain Federation EFIC 2023 in Budapest, Hungary.

24.10.2023
 

New original research from our Division of Pharmacology and Toxicology (working group Schmidt) has been released. The paper by Gomez-Varela et. al.: "Increasing taxonomic and functional characterization of host-microbiome interactions by DIA-PASEF metaproteomics" was published last week in Frontiers in Microbiology.