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from over 50 nations, it is the largest institute of the Max Planck Society. The Department of Theoretical and Computational Biophysics headed by Helmut Grubmüller is inviting applications for a PhD
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biochemistry to join a newly funded GPCR collaborative project to investigate the structural dynamics of GPCRs and their signaling partners using biophysical methods, including single-molecule FRET (smFRET
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techniques to challenging biological systems. Requirements: Ideal candidates should hold an excellent PhD in structural biology, biochemistry, biophysics or in an equivalent area. Experience in membrane
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data generated by super-resolution STED microscopy, FLIM, FRET and FCS. Candidates must hold a PhD in cell biology, biophysics or biochemistry along with experience in advance quantitative microscopy
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crystallography, cryo-EM, molecular biology, as well as biochemical and biophysical approaches. A more detailed description of the project can be found at https://www.biostruct.umu.se/principal-investigators/karina
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models, multi-omics analyses (e.g., RNA-seq, ATAC-seq, scRNA-seq, scDNA-seq, WES/WGS, targeted NGS, DigiWest), a broad spectrum of molecular and cellular biology techniques, biochemistry and biophysics
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ERC-funded postdoctoral fellow in theoretical developmental biology, using tools from applied mathematics, biophysics, and machine learning A talented and creative researcher is sought to take part
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for the fellowship, the candidate should have a PhD degree, or a foreign degree that is deemed equivalent, in plant / algal physiology or experimental biophysics. The ideal candidate has skills in (photo)physiology
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Biophysics) at Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden). Your mission This interdisciplinary project leverages expertise in mitochondrial disease and molecular immunology to investigate the mechanisms and
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study the regulation of PXR and CAR, or CYP3A4 and CYP3A5, by characterizing novel chemical probes (i.e., small molecule inhibitors or degraders) in biochemical/biophysical, cellular and animal models