Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
image analysis, electron microscopy, biochemical methods, genome engineering, mass photometer and data handling. A publication record is strongly desired. Apply Before: 07/08/2025, 23:59
-
– £51,735 per annum, inclusive of London Weighting), based at Guy’s Campus, New Hunt’s House, King’s College London. The post offers access to dedicated microscopy suites, electronics and mechanical workshops
-
– £51,735 per annum, inclusive of London Weighting), based at Guy’s Campus, New Hunt’s House, King’s College London. The post offers access to dedicated microscopy suites, electronics and mechanical workshops
-
Good attention to detail Desirable criteria Experience in electron and atomic force microscopy Experience in evaluation of hot electron energy Experience in numerical simulations Downloading a copy of
-
tissue preparation, immunohistochemistry, confocal microscopy, culture and analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays. The post-holder will participate in lab
-
-electron microscopy) and analyze the resulting datasets using biophysical modelling. A willingness to learn and employ biochemical approaches and interact with external collaborators in molecular biology and
-
to the regulation of complex behaviours. This will involve a range of techniques including high resolution confocal microscopy to determine receptor localisation, behavioural analysis of C. elegans and computational
-
of chromatin or obstacles on the DNA. To do so, you will design and employ novel biophysical instrumentation (e.g. optical tweezers, single-molecule fluorescence, microfluidics, cryo-electron microscopy) and
-
: Essential criteria PhD qualified in relevant subject area * Experience in cryo-electron microscopy/structural biology sample preparation and data collection Proficiency in Linux command line usage and cryo-EM
-
microscopy or flow cytometry and be capable of learning techniques required for the genetic transformation of filamentous fungi. Candidates coming from model organisms, such as Saccharomyces cerevisiae