118 advance-soil-structure-modelling Postdoctoral research jobs at University of Oxford
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and structural biology of rhomboid-like membrane proteins. You should hold a PhD/DPhil in a topic relevant to structural biology and biochemistry, together with relevant experience. You should be able
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approaches, as well as being able to build on expertise in bacteriology, cell biology, structural biology and biochemistry in the group. You should hold, or be close to completion of, a PhD/DPhil in biological
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research projects require a creative, multidisciplinary approach, and as such provide opportunities across parasitology, structural biology, biochemistry and cell biology including single molecule
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the methodology and experimental approaches, as well as being able to build on expertise in bacteriology, cell biology, structural biology and biochemistry in the group. You should hold, or be close to completion
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including protein purification, SDS-PAGE, and western blotting. The post holder should be familiar with bioinformatics tools and databases (BLAST, protein structure prediction tools) and have basic
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to DNA damage-induced transcription stress. This post is fixed term for 3 years. What are you going to do? In this fully-funded project, you will: • employ advanced biophysical instrumentation
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developing characterisations of network models and interactions with methods in statistical machine learning. The post holder provides guidance to junior members of the research group including project
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with cutting-edge models and technologies—including patient-derived glioblastoma organoids, CRISPR-based screens, mass cytometry, and advanced microscopy—to dissect these complex biological processes
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for developing bioactive hybrid materials and evaluating their functionality using in vitro cell and organoid models to engineer regenerative tissue constructs for treatment of a broad range of disorders This post
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form, how it is generated and how it evolves. In particular we focus on the evolution and evolvability of vertebral counts, and we use various species of Lake Malawi cichlids as our model organism