151 phd-bioinformatics-scholarship Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford in Uk
-
suit someone with a high level of organisational skills and keen to share some responsibility of looking after the laboratory, alongside their own bioinformatics work and acting as a conduit for
-
expected to be bioinformatic in nature. Applicants must have a PhD in a relevant subject, experience of macrosynteny analysis and phylogenetic analysis of gene families, and a thorough knowledge of animal
-
for differential rate correction). The successful applicant will hold, or be close to completion of, a relevant PhD/DPhil in bioinformatics, comparative genomics and phylogenetics, together with relevant experience
-
that control the response to low oxygen conditions in Marchantia polymorpha. They will contribute both to the practical work with plants but also some bioinformatics work on protein structure and function
-
these processes, with the aim of understanding how ageing promotes CH progression. You will hold a PhD within the area of molecular biology or have thesis submitted at time of application, and will have experience
-
have prior experience in bioinformatic analysis as described in the job description. The post holder provides guidance to junior members of the research group including research assistants, PhD students
-
at the Old Road Campus Research Building (ORCRB), Oxford, OX3 7DQ and it is offered on a full-time, fixed-term basis for three years. About you You will hold a PhD (or near completion) in a relevant discipline
-
these bioinformatic experiments. Access to a high-performance computer will be provided. The candidate must be capable of generating complex molecular compound models in silico and using current molecular dynamic
-
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
-
culture and analysis, multi-omics and bioinformatics. The biological focus will be on vascular biology, immune cell function and metabolism, with an emphasis on understanding the role of new genes and