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project focusing on a long-standing and fascinating question : « what makes our brain cells human ? » (see our recent work : Hecker et al. Science 2025; Libé-Philippot et al. Cell 2023; Vanderhaeghen and
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offering a postdoctoral position funded by an ERC project aimed at revolutionizing therapeutic delivery into the brain via the blood-CSF barrier. Our pioneering research harnesses the power of single-domain
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will focus on the development, optimization and application of multi-modal analysis strategies and pipelines for sequencing data generated on nucleic acids isolated from biofluids (genomics, epigenomics
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postdoctoral researcher interested in studying human-associated microbial communities in health and disease. The ideal candidate has the following qualifications: A PhD degree in bioinformatics, computational
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to unravel how plants control gene expression across different tissues and stress conditions by combining single-cell genomics, artificial intelligence, and synthetic biology. Apart from shedding light on
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and stress conditions by combining single-cell genomics, artificial intelligence, and synthetic biology. Apart from shedding light on the fundamental aspects of transcriptional control, this project
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single-cell mass spectrometry-based proteomics. First under control conditions to establish the methodology and, secondly, under abiotic stress conditions. Profile Essential You have an international PhD
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question: « what makes our brain human ? » (Vanderhaeghen and Polleux, Nat. Rev. Neurosci. 2023). We combine cutting-edge approaches such as pluripotent stem cell models of human corticogenesis, human-mouse
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tissue studies. Essential You have an international PhD in physiology, neuroscience, biomedical sciences, or related fields. You are an expert in molecular biology and/or electrophysiology. You are eager
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method, can engineer thousands of defined mutations in parallel in a single test tube in yeast. Strains are tagged by DNA barcodes, allowing to efficiently track mutations in cell populations during