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A postdoctoral position is available in Prof. Ivan Ahel’s group based in the Sir William Dunn School of Pathology, University of Oxford to study the interplay of ADP-ribosylation and ubiquitylation
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A postdoctoral position is available in Prof Ivan Ahel’s group at the Sir William Dunn School of Pathology, University of Oxford to study interplay between ADP-ribosylation and ubiquitination
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2022, PMID: 36462505). The research will be conducted in a friendly and supportive atmosphere with access to outstanding facilities and within a vibrant postdoc community. The applicant should hold, or
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for applications is 12:00 on Monday 7th July 2025. Interviews will be held as soon as possible thereafter. At the Dunn School we are committed to supporting the professional and career development of our postdocs
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exploring B cell migration in the spleen. The successful candidate will have extensive experience in handling and processing live spleens and an established expertise in live imaging of this organ. As a
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reverse genetics for generating recombinant influenza viruses, proximity labelling, and cross-linking mass spectrometry. The positions would suit enthusiastic and highly organised postdoctoral scientists
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/DPhil) together with established knowledge in wired computer networks and sustainable computing, significant coding experience (both Python and C/C++), and a record of working in a Linux environment and
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-on experience in at least one of single-cell or spatial omics, imaging, or other high-dimensional biological data types. You interrogate existing literature critically, design rigorous experiments and deliver
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that requires accurate sub-grid models (e.g., Particle-in-Cell or Vlasov codes) coupled to a hydrodynamic simulation. In general, charged-particle transport is a non-trivial task, not only because of the large
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on single-agent settings. We are seeking a highly motivated postdoc to conduct research into this fast-moving area. Directions may include investigating quality evaluation methods for multi-agent systems