10 postdoc-in-postdoc-in-automation-and-control-"Multiple" Postdoctoral positions at Wayne State University
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investigators. The postdoc will be housed in the Department of Pharmacology, in the Scott Hall Building of Basic Medical Sciences at Wayne State University's School of Medicine. The major thrust of the research
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, which span human cohort studies and animal models at Wayne State University in Detroit, MI. Projects comprise multiple population-based studies, including the Sperm Environmental Epigenetics and
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Summary We study cell division mechanisms using C. elegans as a model organism. Our main R01 funded project seeks to characterize novel functions of separase during cytokinesis. We use multiple
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and early-life development that span human cohort studies and animal models at Wayne State University in Detroit, MI. Projects comprise of multiple population-based studies including the Sperm
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Summary The Park Lab is seeking highly motivated postdocs to study synaptic molecular dynamics that underlie memory formation in health and its impairments in Alzheimer's disease. Candidates with
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will address this need by devising multiple innovative strategies to engineer recombinant immunoglobulins with enhanced therapeutic properties to reduce the required dosage and circumvent the need for a
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syndromes, cancer, and other diseases. We leverage a close collaboration with the National Institute of Health's Perinatology Research Branch. Our research has been funded by multiple grants from NSF, NIH and
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biology, and biochemistry) in multiple experimental systems (budding yeast, Drosophila, and cultured cells). The postdoctoral fellow will work in a dynamic and collaborative lab environment. We are looking
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Responses to Environmental Stressors, Integrative Biosciences Center (IBio), Wayne State University, to work on an NIH grant-supported project to study the mechanisms controlling developmental expression of
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several brain areas of the MBN and compare patterns between opioid-exposed and control dams and investigate associations with changes in maternal behaviors. We expect that perinatal exposure to BUP inhibits