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This role is for internal candidates only Three PDRA roles available Applications are invited for a fixed-term IOI Postdoctoral Research Associate - Microbiology for Antimicrobial Drug discovery and
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microbiology Your personal sphere of play: The Unit of Ecology and Evolution at the University of Vienna is seeking a Postdoctoral Researcher with a background in molecular biology and biochemistry. If you have
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We are seeking a Research Assistant for a project testing the ability of phage to target bacteria carrying plasmids associated with antibiotic resistance genes. Many of the most important antibiotic resistance genes are carried by conjugative plasmids that transfer resistance across strain and...
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for Pathogen Research and the new Life and Mind Building in central Oxford. The role will include microbiological techniques, assay development and optimisation, performing immunological evaluations, and
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communities, such as the human gut microbiome. This role will use a combination of microbiological, genetic and analytical techniques to isolate and engineer bacteria for use as next-generation probiotics
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communities, such as the human gut microbiome. This role will use a combination of microbiological, genetic and analytical techniques to isolate and engineer bacteria for use as next-generation probiotics
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. The Preston lab is highly interdisciplinary and collaborative and co-located with a dynamic cluster of research groups studying plant biology, microbiology and plant-microbe interactions. You will hold, or be
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. We are part of the larger Modernising Medical Microbiology (MMM) Unit which comprises approximately 40 researchers situated in Oxford, predominantly at the John Radcliffe Hospital. The group is taking
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. Scottish Credit and Qualification level 10 (Honours degree or equivalent) in Microbiology or other relevant subject and close to completion of a PhD (Scottish Credit and Qualification Framework level 12) in
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in a supportive team environment and is eager to take the lead in characterising Mtb populations from patient samples. The successful candidate will play a central role in microbiological data