Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
candidate will investigate the functions of bile metabolites induced by bacterial infection. We aim to advance our understanding of how infection-stimulated bile metabolites influence intestinal defense
-
processing of social information in patients with psychiatric conditions remain largely unclear. We use a suite of cutting-edge techniques, including in vivo multi-photon imaging, fiber photometry, and custom
-
Position Summary The Cognitive Technology Research Laboratory (CTRLab) in the Knight Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center at WashU in St. Louis is seeking a postdoctoral research associate to work in
-
and hamster models. The projects in the lab include assessing the role of T and B cell immunity on virus infection and transmission, evaluating innovative virus vaccines, as well as developing assays
-
://engineering.wustl.edu/news/2024/WashU-awarded-20-million-to-develop-high-tech-imaging-technology.html . The candidate is expected to work on one of the following research areas and/or develop new research directions
-
Position Summary Candidate will conduct full-time research on topics including novel histone modifications (epigenetic marks) and their role in immune regulation, cancer and metabolism. Job
-
research, a demonstrable capacity to work in highly interdisciplinary environments, creativity, and collegiality are essential. The successful candidates must be prepared to support developing and
-
nature and level of work performed by people assigned to this classification. They are not intended to be construed as an exhaustive list of all job duties performed by the personnel so classified
-
, functional genomics, and mouse engineering approaches to understand how cancer cells communicate with their neighbors, or the stromal cells, in the metastatic cascade. Our lab also applies biostatistics
-
Position Summary The Krais Lab is seeking a postdoctoral researcher to work on DNA damage response and cancer biology projects. Current projects investigate how cells navigate a complex signaling