Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
of memory, senescent, and exhausted T-cells with age. The PhD candidates will work on: Identifying key metabolic pathways involved in T-cell aging using advanced genetic models that allow for parallel CRISPR
-
well as Mobility Modeling and Simulation. Research topics range from conceptual issues of strategic planning to small-scale analyses of specific street spaces. The chair’s methodological focus is on the empirical
-
the following PhD project: Odorant Receptors (ORs) constitute the main family of chemosensory genes in nearly all species. Based on the canonical model of the olfactory circuit, a single OR is expressed in each
-
and exploration of novel P-compounds. Characterization of the obtained products and intermediates via spectroscopic methods such as NMR, UV-vis, IR/Raman, mass spectrometry and X-ray structure
-
project we aim to study if dendritic cells also contribute to trained immunity in models of infection and inflammation. Dendritic cells play a fundamental role in antigen presentation and the priming
-
(extravascular coagulation signaling) in homeostatic condition as well as in aging mouse models. Identification of these interactions could provide new approaches to counteract or delay age associated exhaustion
-
such as NMR, UV-vis, IR/Raman, mass spectrometry and X-ray structure determination. Requirements: university degree (Master or equivalent) in chemistry; background in organic or inorganic molecular
-
features allow overcoming such limitation? The PhD project will be largely experimental with some modelling aspects, and will begin with an identification of a set of research questions based on a detailed
-
PhD project: R-loops are secondary DNA structures consisting of an RNA-DNA hybrid and a single stranded DNA that can form behind the elongating RNA polymerase II during transcription. R-loops play
-
of this project is on the role of APCs in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), a mouse model for the human autoimmune disease of the central nervous system (CNS) multiple sclerosis (MS). In EAE