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Primary supervisor - Dr Myriam Charpentier Are you passionate about plant biology, endosymbiosis, system biology or bioengineering? Join a cutting-edge research project exploring how plants
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replication and transcription. Using C. elegans genetics, advanced RNA biology techniques, and industrial biochemistry training with Inspiralis Ltd., the student will investigate how RNAs and their
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recently (~50,000 years ago), there were many other types of humans on earth, including Neanderthals and Denisovans. What was it about modern human biology—if anything—that set us apart from these extinct
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biology, and will take their newly designed and synthesised compounds into cellular models of disease. The project would particularly suit a student who has an interest in working in synthetic medicinal
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to alternative splicing. This PhD offers the scope to develop independence – pursing promising leads on interesting biology – while addressing one of evolution’s most longstanding challenges. Beyond advancing
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their host plant. Use cutting-edge molecular biology and genomics, we will try to solve a decades-old mystery in plant pathology. Many plant disease-causing fungi lose their ability to cause disease
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at the John Innes Centre, providing opportunities to develop extensive skills in a breadth of areas, including field surveys, plant pathology, molecular biology, and computational biology. Additionally, you
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improvements of the lives of a huge number of men. Techniques and skills training During the PhD you will become an expert in a range of molecular biology, biochemistry, cell and cancer biology techniques
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devastating fungal disease of cereals, Blast (caused the pathogen Magnaporthe oryzae). The studentship will involve techniques including molecular biology, biochemistry, structural biology, AI-led computational
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-of-the-art technics in cell biology, genetics, molecular biology and proteomic, this project aims at characterizing a novel signalling pathway modulating root nodule symbiosis. The insights gained from