Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Description Description: PhD project supervised by Prof. Dr. Magdalena Götz (Biomedical Center LMU Munich & Institute for Stem Cell Research, Helmholtz Center Munich). The project investigates
-
, understand its role in therapy resistance, and identify novel regulators using innovative CRISPR screening approaches combined with advanced imaging, single-cell transcriptomics, and phospho-proteomics.
-
of the molecular species of the radionuclide in cellular compartments/cells using spectroscopic techniques (e.g., UV-Vis, Raman, X-ray absorption spectroscopy) and microscopic methods (e.g., electron microscopy
-
positions in the areas of biochemistry, structural biology, biophysics, cell biology, systems biology, and computational biology. We are looking for outstanding graduates from all over the world to join our
-
well as modern genetic engineering methods and microscopy. Requirements: a very good MSc or equivalent degree in Biology, Biochemistry/Biophysics is required for employment experience in cell or molecular biology
-
state of Rhineland-Palatinate. Our research focuses on the biology of the cell nucleus and ranges from the molecular level to systems and computational approaches. Researchers at IMB are supported by
-
-performance chain; therefore, enabling stability and control of novel manufacturing processes as well as achieving desired properties within materials science and engineering. Use-cases will be defined within
-
methods for biomedical and toxicological research Establishment and characterisation of 2D cell culture and 3D sphere models based on human primary cells and induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) Using
-
with five partners. The focus of the doctoral program is the analysis of the spatial and temporal variability of decontamination efficiency in different soil materials on a flow cell scale. The results
-
arbitrary complexity and shape at the sub-nanometer scale. Such structures can be used to construct artificial cell mimics and new materials. A scaffold-free DNA tile assembly is a programmable method for the