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range from cell biological over biochemical to molecular biology and bioinformatics approaches. Collaborations with structural biologists are possible. Your profile Applicants should hold a PhD in
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friendly atmosphere of large and interacting communities for e.g. structural biology, molecular cell biology, computational biology, neurobiology, and molecular medicine that encourages lively, open, and
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genome engineering, quantitative and live-cell microscopy, biochemistry, and computational analysis to dissect how cells sense and respond to replication-associated threats. Recent work from the lab has
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Research Fund Denmark, led by Professor Tore Bjerregaard Stage, aiming to understand chemotherapy side effects using state-of-the-art cell-based models. About the research environment The research areas
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Are you passionate about challenging established norms in extracellular vesicle biology? Do you have any experience in single-cell RNAseq? Then, the Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics
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screening discoveries with single-cell multi-omics approaches in the lab to map candidate repressive mechanisms across cell types and developmental trajectories. These activities will be carried out in close
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cell expression systems as well as a strong background in protein biochemistry and structural biology (x-ray crystallography and cryoEM) is required. The post doc will use different biophysical
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QGG Aarhus University seeks two Postdoctoral researchers in Quantitative Genetics of sustainable ...
research infrastructure, laboratories, equipment, and highperforming computing clusters. Place of work The place of work is C.F. Møllers Allé 3, Bldg. 1130, 8000 Aarhus C. The area of employment is Aarhus
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cutting-edge solutions that enable researchers to explore complex biological systems at unprecedented resolutions while maintaining the spatial context. DanSIC is also part of CellX – The Danish Single Cell
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for enhanced cell regulation; and iv) application of these adaptative systems for reversible control of cell function, exploring their potential biomedical use. This project is part of an EU funded ERC