Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
facilities in imaging, immunology, tissue engineering, and bioinformatics. Qualifications We seek applicants with the following qualifications: Essential: PhD in molecular biology, immunology, biochemistry
-
qualifications PhD in molecular biology, biomedicine, biochemistry, or a related field. Experience in genomics tool. Strong analytical, organizational, and record-keeping skills. Good communication skill in
-
facilities in imaging, immunology, tissue engineering, and bioinformatics. Qualifications We seek applicants with the following qualifications: Essential: PhD in molecular biology, immunology, biochemistry
-
for Food Allergy at DTU National Food Institute, you will be part of a dynamic and highly ambitious research and innovative environment, with many national and international collaborators from both academia
-
Applicants should hold a PhD degree in Biochemistry or Molecular Biology and have experience in protein O-GlcNAcylation modification field. Requirement: At least five years of research experience in fly
-
cutting-edge experimental and computational technologies. Our aim is to dissect dynamics and cellular programmes active during human blood lineage development and to decipher how haematopoietic
-
characterisation of molecular building blocks and templates; enzymatic synthesis and analysis of dynamic systems of oligosaccharides; biophysical studies using spectroscopy (NMR, UV-Vis, fluorescence and CD
-
and 10X multiome data sets to reveal the molecular programmes that are active in human blood cells. You will employ cutting-edge single-cell computational approaches to chart and understand the gene
-
molecules. The project is based in the team of professor Gregers Rom Andersen at the department of Molecular Biology and Genetics (MBG). Funding for the project is secured by a major grant from the Novo
-
Two year postdoc position at Aarhus University for single molecule FRET based investigations of l...
molecules. The project is based in the team of professor Gregers Rom Andersen at the department of Molecular Biology and Genetics (MBG). Funding for the project is secured by a major grant from the Novo