Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
analyse of polar metabolism, including data processing and validating these methods for different samples types (cell & organoid cultures, subcellular fractions, plasma, urine, tissue etc). The application
-
Fixed-term: The funds for this post are available for 2 years in the first instance. Applications are invited for post-doctoral research associates to join the group of Professor Angelos Michaelides
-
A Research Associate post is available in the Drosophila Connectomics Group directed by Greg Jefferis and Matthias Landgraf in the Department of Zoology at the University of Cambridge. The applicant
-
or orthotopic tumour models Supporting preclinical treatment studies involving standard-of-care or experimental agents Applying in vivo imaging techniques (e.g., bioluminescence imaging) to monitor tumour
-
Investigator based in Zoology and will be mentored by an experienced post-doc. There will be opportunities to contribute to training new team members as the group expands and to general project management, as
-
imaging data - Developing new methods for inference of copy number alterations from single-cell DNA sequencing data - Analysing patterns of single-cell copy number variation to identify mechanistic
-
a series of high-resolution FRET biosensors to track such dynamics for gibberellin, abscisic acid, auxin and salicylic acid in living plants. The Jones group combines imaging of FRET biosensors with
-
Fixed-term: The funds for this post are available for 36 months in the first instance. We are looking for a Post-Doctoral Research Associate (PDRA), with a PhD in Physics, Materials Science or
-
. The role will be closely supervised by post-doctoral researchers and therefore represents an excellent training opportunity for candidates seeking to gain research experience. Candidates will hold, or be
-
, stable isotope tracers, medical imaging). Experience with molecular biology techniques, stable isotope tracers methodologies, GCMS desirable. -Familiarity with bioinformatics and computational biology