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Postdoctoral researcher position. Mechanobiology in bioengineered neurodevelopment. Laboratory of...
of Bioengineering and Morphogenesis at KU Leuven. Our research focuses on understanding the relationship between cell fate, growth and morphogenesis in bioengineered organoid model systems. We are looking for highly
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temperature signalling in plants, such as the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana and the crop plants wheat and soybean. To unravel this, we focus on dynamic changes in protein phosphorylation status, since
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on cancer metastasis and novel metabolic pathways. We exploit mouse models, genetic engineering, metabolomics and single cell & spatial multi-omics analysis to gain groundbreaking insights into metabolism as
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metastasis and novel metabolic pathways. We exploit mouse models, genetic engineering, metabolomics and single cell & spatial multi-omics analysis to gain groundbreaking insights into metabolism as a driving
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project that combines cutting-edge approaches including state-of-the-art imaging techniques, pluripotent stem cell models, in vivo mouse models of neurological disorders, drug (brain) delivery and nanobody
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Immunology or Neuroimmunology Experience in working with mouse models (FELASA B or C required) Strong organizational and communication skills, with an ability to work independently and collaboratively. Ability
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postdoctoral researcher - molecular mechanisms T-cell leukemia - Diagnostische Wetenschappen (28449)
-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) by using CRISPR-CAS9 genetically manipulated cell lines, conditional loss-of-function mouse models and patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models. You will use multi
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the larger BacterialBlueprint framework. The general goal of this framework is to uncover the internal architecture of bacterial replication, beyond that of classical model species, and identify the molecular
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question: « what makes our brain human ? » (Vanderhaeghen and Polleux, Nat. Rev. Neurosci. 2023). We combine cutting-edge approaches such as pluripotent stem cell models of human corticogenesis, human-mouse
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question: « what makes our brain human ? » (Vanderhaeghen and Polleux, Nat. Rev. Neurosci. 2023). We combine cutting-edge approaches such as pluripotent stem cell models of human corticogenesis, human-mouse