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: Experience with molecular virology of HIV or EBV including assay development and reverse genetics OR Experience with cell/molecular biology and protein biochemistry/biophysics, including recombinant protein
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leads that target undrugged proteins or proteins prone to drug resistance. 3. Combining mass spectrometry with genetic perturbations to mechanistically define protein function. 4. Developing automation
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—to address critical sustainability and climate resilience challenges. Your primary focus will be on developing, refining, and deploying innovative genetic engineering tools for CRISPR-Cas9 delivery. Key
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mechanistic understanding of polar lobe formation at the molecular, cellular and biophysical level. You will adapt live imaging, genetic and molecular manipulation, and biophysics assays to embryos of several
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for (1) engineering BPAN genetic variants into cell lines; (2) developing cellular assays including of autophagy function and cellular survival; (3) working with the Stanford high throughput drug screening
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. This includes integrating LLMs with structured data sources to develop robust computational phenotyping algorithms and scalable models for real-world evidence generation. The role will involve both method
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and Obstetrics Reproductive Biology Genetics Postdoc Appointment Term: Initially 2025-2026, renewal expected. Appointment Start Date: Available immediately, depending on visa status and requirements
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the genetic and molecular pathways that regulate vascular function in the lung and heart. We investigate how endothelial cells and pericytes interact to shape vascular responses and right ventricular adaptation
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, genetics, molecular biology, and/or computational biology. Ability to work well in a multidisciplinary, diverse, and collaborative research environment. A genuine passion for science, and creative thinking
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, proficiency in R and at least one additional scripting language (e.g., Python) and knowledge in biostatistics are required. Experience working with genetic association studies, immune repertoire, single cell