36 multiple-sequence-alignment Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford in United Kingdom
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work on the PANGEA-HIV project, analysing viral sequence data to assess how effective broadly neutralising antibodies may be against current HIV strains in Southern Africa. Second, you'll support early
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will be involved in processing and analysing tissue collected from patients undergoing surgery, using whole genome sequencing, transcriptomics and proteomics. You will be heavily involved in designing
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will be involved in processing and analysing tissue collected from patients undergoing surgery, using whole genome sequencing, transcriptomics and proteomics. You will be heavily involved in designing
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, to co-ordinate multiple aspects of work to meet deadlines. You will undertake laboratory work as required, such as sample preparation, cell culture, analysis of tumour samples and, tissue staining. Other
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use computational approaches to mine natural biodiversity in gene sequences to identify engineering targets to increase lipid content and enhance the water use efficiency. The project will make use
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” approaches the lab has pioneered, including the use of TET-Assisted Pyridine-borane Sequencing (TAPS), an innovative sequencing method that allows the simultaneous detection of mutations and methylation
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you will manage your own academic research and administrative activities which involves small-scale project management, to coordinate multiple aspects of work to meet deadlines. You will adapt existing
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data from patient samples, including DNA methylation, histone modifications, single-cell transcriptomics and chromatin accessibility. You will contribute to the study and sequencing design, collaborate
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(notably MCP, A2A). Note that the successful candidate will work in collaboration with two other postdocs on a closely aligned project “Rethinking multi-agent systems in the era of LLMs”, funded by
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successful candidate will work in collaboration with two other postdocs on a closely aligned project “Rethinking multi-agent systems in the era of LLMs”, funded by the Schmidt Sciences Foundation, and also