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://baldwinlab.chem.ox.ac.uk/. About you Applicants must hold a PhD Biophysics, Chemistry or a related area, or be close to completion, prior to taking up your appointment. The research requires experience in NMR, familiarity
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biochemical, biophysical and structural biology techniques (NMR, protein crystallography and cryo-EM) to address fundamental questions around ubiquitin regulation and function. The post-holder will have access
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at the plasma membrane. The lab undertakes a multidisciplinary approach spanning biochemistry/biophysics, cell biology and structural biology to address our research questions. In this role you will build on our
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ultimately contributing to the development of new antiviral approaches. The project takes a cross-disciplinary approach, combining biochemical, biophysical, cell biological, and virological methods, including
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determined by the funding available. About you You should hold, or be near completion of, a PhD/DPhil in Molecular Microbiology, Biochemistry, Biophysics or related discipline. You must have substantive
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/DPhil or be near completion of a PhD/DPhil in a subject relative to Structural Biology, Biochemistry, or Biophysics. You should be driven, have experience in protein production, the analysis
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collaborate in the preparation of scientific reports and journal articles, and occasionally present papers and posters. You will hold a PhD/DPhil (or near completion) in a relevant area of research, such as
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about biomolecules, including their mass, size, charge. Applicants must hold a PhD in Chemistry or a relevant subject area, (or be close to completion) prior to taking up their appointment. The research
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The University also runs an enormous amount of social groups and sports clubs for those looking for more than just a great place to work. About you Applicants should hold a PhD/DPhil or be near completion of a PhD
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chemistry, protein biophysics, electrophysiology, molecular genetics, and behaviour. We are thus uniquely positioned to address and move towards solving this fascinating and fundamental biological question