-
chemistry, peptide chemistry, organic chemistry, and chemical biology train and supervise undergraduate and PhD research students enhance a positive workplace culture and the strategic direction
-
postdoctoral experience with single-cell RNA sequencing analysis and expertise in immunology or intestinal biology. This position is within the laboratory of Dr Kylie James at the Garvan Institute
-
cellular biology laboratory work, providing scientific support to an NHMRC funded project in a mouse model acute lung injury and a collaborative microbiome project in stool samples collected from patients
-
Apply now Job no:533169 Work type:Full Time Location:Sydney, NSW Categories:Post Doctoral Research Associate Post-doctoral Fellow (Oocyte and Ovarian Biology) Employment Type: Full - time (35 hours
-
for this position lie at the intersection of philosophy of biology and philosophy of cognitive sciences. About Us Macquarie is a university engaged with the real and often complex problems and opportunities
-
of immunology and RNA biology, and to carry out activities to develop our research expertise in mouse models, T cell immunity, molecular biology and multi-omics. You will collaborate within a multidisciplinary
-
of fermentation, cell culture, molecular biology, protein chromatography, protein analysis. Experience working under a documented Quality Management System (QMS) and in industry is not required but highly desirable
-
genome engineering, synthetic biology, or a closely related discipline. You will enjoy contributing to impactful research outcomes and working effectively as part of an international research team. Your
-
bioinformatics, microbiology and microbiomes, and molecular and cell biology, with specialist areas in gene regulation, systems biology, neurogenomics, microbes in health and disease, microbes in the environment
-
advanced imaging (AFM, TEM), fluorescence spectroscopy, and biostructural tools; and collaborate with a diverse team of students and researchers across chemistry, biology, and materials science