Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
-cell multiomics and spatial transcriptomics data from patient samples and patient-derived organoids (Ogden et al., Cell Genomics 2025, Efremova et al. Nature; Efremova et al., Cell Reports) and develop
-
bronchoscopy samples and tissue. Spatial transcriptomics will be used to characterise cellular populations, functional cell states and cell- cell interactions. To validate epithelial-immune cell interactions in
-
establish and validate microfluidic co-culture systems using human glomerular cells and benchmark these platforms against human kidney multi-omic and spatial datasets. These systems will be further developed
-
cohorts. Responsibilities include planning experiments and analysing data; handling of human tissue samples; immunohistochemistry and histopathology; RNA and protein biochemistry; spatial proteomics
-
the working group Economic Geography, which focuses on theory-led, evidence-based, and policy relevant research on spatial aspects of innovation-based socio-economic sustainability transitions. Our research
-
tract, how immunity develops in early life, and how it goes awry in devastating inflammatory diseases such as necrotising enterocolitis and inflammatory bowel disease. Spatial ‘omics and single cell
-
biodiversity trends and they will develop and undertake analyses of biological change in response to human perturbation of the Earth system over different spatial and temporal scales. Key responsibilities
-
at the Barts Cancer Institute (Queen Mary University of London). This role will involve analysing existing spatial-omics data sets and developing novel computational tools to understand the risk of developing
-
at the Barts Cancer Institute (Queen Mary University of London). This role will involve analysing existing spatial-omics data sets and developing novel computational tools to understand the risk of developing
-
of conventional and spatially resolved angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy with spin resolution. The post holder provides guidance to less experienced members of the research group, such as PhD and project