Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
The Leibniz Institute for Agricultural Engineering and Bioeconomy is a pioneer and a driver of bioeconomy research. We create the scientific foundation to transform agricultural, food, industrial
-
of RWTH Aachen University. The DWI is taking on the challenge of surpassing disciplinary limits and tackling new questions relating to materials that combine nature and technology. It is a place where
-
interdisciplinary project seeks to develop new approaches to resilient and sustainable urban development, in cooperation with Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) and RWTH Aachen. For the subproject based
-
expertise in at least one of the following areas: Synthetic biology Protein design Human T cell immunobiology T cell engineering Coding skills and familiarity with software such as Rosetta, ProteinMPNN
-
and technologies. The institute employs an average of 500 people from over 40 nations and, in addition to its scientific tasks, is dedicated to promoting young scientists and engineers. Further
-
Postdoc position – FIGHTBLIGHT: Bioengineering immune receptors for potato blight resistance (m/f/d)
Thompson Institute, Ithaca, NY, USA) and Prof. Sophien Kamoun (The Sainsbury Laboratory, Norwich, UK). Using our recently published Cas-Exo technology for targeted insertions (Schreiber et al., 2024 https
-
being close to receiving a PhD) in hydrology, geoecology or a related field of environmental science or environmental engineering Excellent programming and numerical skills Experience in the development
-
and technologies. The institute employs an average of 500 people from over 40 nations and, in addition to its scientific tasks, is dedicated to promoting young scientists and engineers. Further
-
of the presynaptic compartment. In the project genome engineering in stem cell-derived neurons will be combined with high-resolution imaging and systems biology/ proteomic approaches developed in the Haucke lab
-
(Seoul National University, South Korea) genome engineering in stem cell-derived neurons will be combined with high-resolution imaging and systems biology/ proteomic approaches developed in the Haucke lab