Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
/ X-ray crystallography and natural product research is required. Knowledge in enzymology, protein design, molecular biology, microbial metabolism, natural product analysis (LCMS, NMR etc.) and/or
-
Raman microscopy, this work will enable “greyscale” detection of molecular-level forces and provide new insight into early-stage damage processes in polymers. The research will focus on the synthesis
-
maintenance of neuroinflammatory processes and identify molecular targets that could serve as the basis for future therapies. To that end, we combine human studies with experimental (gnotobiotic) murine models
-
advanced laboratory techniques (e.g., flow cytometry, cell culture and 3D models, molecular analyses) Analyze and interpret experimental data; contribute to data presentation and publications Ensure timely
-
crystallography and natural product research is required. Knowledge in enzymology, protein design, molecular biology, microbial metabolism, natural product analysis (LCMS, NMR etc.) and/or bioinformatics
-
molecular biology, cancer biology or similar domain • Strong expertise and experience in RNA biology and translational control is required, supported by at least one publication/preprint in the field
-
translational development, we aim to shape the future of biomedical innovation. Job description Postdoctoral projects will combine molecular engineering, cell programming, and chemical–biological interfacing
-
the University of Basel. Be part of our future! As a postdoctoral researcher, you will become part of a young team working on cancer stem cells and the molecular mechanisms of their regulation – a highly dynamic
-
emphasis on single-cell RNA sequencing, bulk and single-cell ribosome profiling, proteomics, CRISPR screening data (single-cell CRISPR approaches) and molecular recording data. The Institute for Regenerative
-
highly motivated and ambitious postdoctoral researcher interested in conducting research at the interface of molecular mechanisms underlying brain aging, neurodegenerative diseases and spatial biology