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Project Overview This 5-year BBSRC supported project is a highly multi-disciplinary effort between biology and engineering groups at the University of Oxford to advance cell-based assays
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discipline such as anthropology, bioethics, health sciences or sociology and have strong communicative and people skills as you will be interviewing patients and families that are affected. As you will be
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with the Institute of Physics and Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine. As part of the BRC funding, they will work with Professor Gleeson and Dr Grist in the Oxford Radiology Research Unit
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office license. • Familiarity with standard techniques in immunohistochemistry, cell biology, molecular biology and biochemistry. • Ability to manage own academic research and
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the Office for National Statistics Covid Infection Survey. You will work within Prof Katrina Lythgoe’s Ecology and Evolution of Viruses Research Group based in the Department of Biology and affiliated with
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executing research programmes related to different aspects of thymus biology employing informative experimental models and a broad range of analytical platforms, including single cell transcriptomic analysis
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have recently highlighted the importance of the FAT1 gene during carcinogenesis (Lu et al, Nature Cell Biology 2025; Lu and Kanu, Nature Cell Biology 2025). We strive to understand the molecular
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immunology with a focus on myeloid cell biology and antimicrobial activity. You will study how microbial metabolites, particularly short-chain fatty acids, influence macrophage function and antimicrobial
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a 3-year, fixed-term position, funded by a research grant from the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council. The starting date of this position is flexible with an earliest start date
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of research findings • Collaborate closely with internal and external researchers, including opportunities for co-supervision of students Lab Environment The T-cell Biology Group is part of the MRC WIMM