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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
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We invite applications from creative and motivated individuals to join Professor Sir Shankar Balasubramanian's group for a 4-year PhD studentship, working on a multidisciplinary project exploiting
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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
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. Stipend: Full funding for 4 years covering a personal maintenance stipend starting at £21,500 per annum and the University Composition Fee. Fees: These positions are open to UK citizens or overseas students
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This is a four-year (1+3 MRes/PhD) studentship funded through the Cambridge EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Future Infrastructure and Built Environment: Unlocking Net Zero (FIBE3 CDT). Further
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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
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transcriptomics and histone mark profiling as well as by live imaging approaches. As part of this project, you will have the opportunity to gain computational data analysis skills. This studentship comes with
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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
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scholarships or funding schemes. Students will not be allowed to supplement fees via self-funding. Application process: Please click on the 'Apply' button above to apply for a PhD in Biochemistry via
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Supervisor: Professor Jason Carroll Course start date: 1st October 2026 Project details For further information about the research group, including their most recent publications, please visit their website at https://www.carroll-lab.org.uk/ Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men in...