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Postdoc opportunity within single molecule fluorescence imaging funded by Villum fonden. We seek a postdoc candidate with experience in experimental biophysics to join the single molecule biophysics
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. The successful candidate will use biochemical, biophysical, and optical approaches, including advanced fluorescence microscopy (confocal, TIRF, single-molecule imaging), to dissect the molecular machinery
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, Heidelberg and Mannheim, our researchers harness interdisciplinary collaboration to decipher the complexities of disease at the systems level – from molecules and cells to organs and the entire organism
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Student or Postdoc (f/m/d) for the project Theory and Algorithms for Structure Determination from Single Molecule X‑Ray Scattering Images Project description Single molecule X‑ray scattering experiments
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broad range of areas, including: Nanopore technologies for small-molecule diagnostics Single-molecule technologies for biopolymer analysis Programmable membrane proteins for nanoscale transport and
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Postdoctoral position to study Polo kinase and centrosome abnormalities in cancer and other diseases
approaches (e.g., super-resolution imaging, single molecule tracking, in vitro reconstitution, X-ray crystallography, and cryo-EM) to delineate the molecular bases and structural rules governing
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, biophysical and structural biology techniques including: In vitro evolution and de novo design of RNAs, Biophysical characterization using single (sm) molecule fluorescence and other techniques, such as smFRET
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or mapping single molecules within tissues for biomedical applications we want to hear from you. Join our interdisciplinary group as a postdoctoral researcher at Karolinska Institutet and help us transform
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(e.g. RNAi, CRISPR/Cas9, small-molecules). In this context, we also develop new computational tools for automated analysis and data visualization. These include algorithms and software applications
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(Thorlabs) for imaging large cortical and subcortical areas in awake head-fixed animals, two 2-photon microscopes for single-cell electrophysiological experiments in brain slices (Chun et al, Science 2014