Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Field
-
The Centre for Doctoral Training in Nanoscience and Nanotechnology (NanoDTC) at the University of Cambridge invites applications for its 3.5-year interdisciplinary PhD programme. The programme
-
non-clinical PhD studentship in cardiometabolic research, commencing October 2026 in the Department of Medicine (VPD Heart & Lung Research Institute), University of Cambridge. The project will be based
-
need to apply for a PhD place at your preferred CAM-DTP university and indicate that you wish to be considered for ESRC funding. If you are made an offer of admission, your department will decide whether
-
- or tissue-microenvironment. Our existing collaborations with AstraZeneca have yielded very interesting data specific metabolites that are involved in the migration and positioning of regulatory (Tregs) and
-
PhD studentship: Defining the role of the pioneer factor FOXA1 in hormone-dependent cancer Supervisor: Professor Jason Carroll Course start date: 1st October 2026 Project details For further
-
Researcher Profile First Stage Researcher (R1) Positions PhD Positions Country United Kingdom Application Deadline 15 Sep 2025 - 23:59 (Europe/London) Type of Contract Temporary Job Status Full-time Offer
-
chromatin profiling methods along with CRISPR/Cas9-meduated cell line engineering and various animal models. You will study the effects of the activation or depletion of chromatin-modifying enzymes using
-
of the genome. This position will be primarily based in the Balasubramanian Lab in the CRUK Cambridge Institute (CRUK CI), and will involve collaborative interactions with the group's sister lab in the Yusuf
-
processes associated with CIN [1], leveraging single-cell DNA sequencing understand CIN heterogeneity [2], and development and implementation of machine learning and AI models to imaging data [3]. The student
-
tumours and metastases with the goal to design combinatorial therapeutic approaches. The project will involve the use of genetically complex organoid-derived transplantation mouse models of pancreatic