The University Of Chicago: $21 Million Gift Received To Merge Quantum With Biology

By Amit Chowdhry ● Jun 13, 2025

The University of Chicago has announced the launch of the Berggren Center for Quantum Biology and Medicine, which will combine quantum technology with biology to transform the future of medicine and patient care. Launched with a $21 million gift from philanthropist Thea Berggren, the Berggren Center will be co-directed by Prof. Greg Engel of the UChicago Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering and the Department of Chemistry and Prof. Julian Solway of the Department of Medicine and founding director of the Institute for Translational Medicine.

The $21 million gift from philanthropist Thea Berggren to the University of Chicago will establish the Berggren Center for Quantum Biology and Medicine, launching a bold scientific field that merges quantum technology with biology to transform the future of medicine. This interdisciplinary effort seeks to harness the power of quantum engineering, which is capable of the most sensitive measurements known to science, to peer inside the human body in unprecedented ways. The goal is to unlock insights into biology and disease that were previously inaccessible, paving the way for new diagnostics and therapies.

The Berggren Center will be housed at the UChicago Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering and draw on UChicago’s renowned strengths in quantum science, biomedical research and clinical care.

The center is founded on two core objectives: to drive the development of revolutionary quantum tools for biomedical applications, and to cultivate a new generation of “bilingual scholars” — scientists and engineers capable of translating quantum advances into clinical solutions. And the gift will fund fellowships to train interdisciplinary scholars, seed technical development projects, and host global conferences to build an international community around quantum biology and medicine.

UChicago researchers are experienced in this field of work. For example, Assistant Professor of Molecular Engineering Peter Maurer, Professor of Medicine Alexander T. Pearson, and Immunoengineering Professor Aaron Esser-Kahn are collaborating on quantum-enabled identifiers to observe individual immune cells in real time. And this technology could one day monitor thousands of cells simultaneously, providing new insights into inflammation and cancer, and enabling more precise, personalized treatment.

The Berggren Center will be co-directed by Greg Engel, a professor at UChicago PME and the Department of Chemistry, and Julian Solway, Professor of Medicine and founding director of the Institute for Translational Medicine.

Engel and Solway have long collaborated via the NSF Quantum Leap Challenge Institute for Quantum Sensing for Biophysics and Bioengineering (QuBBE), which aims to develop quantum imaging tools that exceed classical limits. The center will build on this foundation, focusing on accelerating clinical impact.

KEY QUOTES:

“The establishment of the Berggren Center reflects a commitment to a powerful idea: that the deepest scientific insights often emerge when we bring distinct disciplines together in bold new ways. Combining quantum engineering with medicine, the work of the center stands to transform our understanding of health and disease.”

President Paul Alivisatos

“UChicago is a global leader in quantum science, engineering and medicine. The Berggren Center will bring together faculty from across the University to create a new frontier in patient care. We are deeply grateful to Thea Berggren for her visionary investment in human health.” 

Nadya Mason, dean of the UChicago Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering and Interim Vice President for Science, Innovation and Partnerships at the University of Chicago

“By drawing on UChicago Medicine’s strengths in biomedical research and clinical care, the center will help ensure quantum breakthroughs move from bench to bedside. Also, through innovative training programs, including a quantum-focused pathway for current and future physician-scientists, the Center begins to build a workforce that can continually look for new ways of diagnosing and treating disease.” 

Mark Anderson, Executive Vice President for Medical Affairs and dean of the UChicago Biological Sciences Division and the Pritzker School of Medicine

“Fusing quantum physics and medicine is no small feat, but it opens the door to tools and discoveries we never thought possible. This gift will help unite two very different scientific cultures in a common mission to improve human health.” 

Greg Engel

 “The Berggren Center represents the next frontier in translational science. By bringing together quantum physicists, engineers and clinicians, we’re creating a new scientific language with the potential to transform how we understand and treat disease.” 

Julian Solway

“During a visit to the Atacama Desert, I engaged with astronomers from around the world, and all were inspired by how quantum mechanics is shaping the future. That moment sparked a different question: What if we applied the same quantum principles to cellular physiology and pathology? The potential to transform medicine and how we understand and treat disease is extraordinary, and the University of Chicago is the ideal place to bring this vision to life.”

Thea Berggren

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