175 computational-cell-signaling-post-doc Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
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Science Park. The post is funded by Innovate UK and is fixed-term to 30th April 2026. The CEBD project is an ambitious programme to develop the first category enhanced battery powered eVTOL. The project
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The University of Oxford is seeking an experienced Post Doctoral Research Scientist to join our laboratory team in the Radcliffe Department of Medicine (RDM) Division of Cardiovascular Medicine. RDM
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. The project involves the combination of the use of cultured cells and vertebrate animals in particular zebrafish to understand newly-uncovered reactive metabolite signalling pathways of importance in well
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About the role We have an exciting opportunity to join the dynamic research group led by Dr Jie Yang in the Department of Oncology at the University of Oxford. The group conducts research on T cell
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strategic programme. Through multiomic and spatial biology exploration of temporally distinct samples from clinical trials and advanced biological models, an international consortium of leading colorectal
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signalling in regulation of immunity and genome stability. The post-holder will be responsible for managing own academic research, adapting existing and developing new scientific techniques and experimental
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and how it may respond to vaccination. You will supervise master’s and PhD students, and support the overall efforts of the lab. This post offers the opportunity to engage in cutting-edge translational
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Secretion System. You will build on our recent work in this area (Nature (2018) 564: 77, Nat Microbiol (2021) 6: 221, Nat Microbiol (2024) 9: 1089, bioRxiv (2025)) by carrying out protein biochemical, cell
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biochemical reconstitution, electron cryomicroscopy (cryo-EM), advanced bacterial genetics, and phage biology to explore how cells and viruses control the three-dimensional structure of DNA. We investigate how
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have recently highlighted the importance of the FAT1 gene during carcinogenesis (Lu et al, Nature Cell Biology 2025; Lu and Kanu, Nature Cell Biology 2025). We strive to understand the molecular