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to study calcium and redox signaling between the Endoplasmic Reticulum and Mitochondria in the Simmen laboratory (Department of Cell Biology, University of Alberta). The successful applicant will be
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and collaborating with team members Minimum Qualifications PhD degree in Biochemistry, Cell Biology, or related discipline Extensive expertise in cell biology methods (cell culture and related
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, microbiology, chemical biology) by the start date. A strong motivation for research, excellent organizational skills, proficient communication abilities in English, and a solid track record of publications
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Council of Canada, and the Crohn’s and Colitis Canada foundation. Minimum Qualifications A Ph.D. in biochemistry or microbiology within 2 years of graduation Experience in molecular biology with a
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activities. Duties Performs molecular biology and biochemical techniques. PCR (quantitative, non-quantitative, and RT). SDS-PAGE and western blotting. Expression and purification of recombinant proteins
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). The department is the home of proteomic infrastructure and expertise (https://apm.biochem.ualberta.ca/Contact.html ) with an ongoing history of excellence in structural biology. The University of Alberta is a Top
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The position can begin immediately once the preferred candidate is found. Salary is competitive with UofA standards and offers a benefits package found at: Postdoctoral Fellows Benefits Working for the University of Alberta The University of Alberta acknowledges that we are located on Treaty 6...
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), neurological diseases (including Alzheimer’s and ALS), kidney diseases, animal/livestock health, forestry research, microbiome research, food chemistry, structural biology, portable sensor systems, and
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alterations in pathogenic vs regulatory CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in autoimmune diabetes. Candidates with a doctoral degree within 1 year and have experience in lymphocyte biology, molecular/cellular immunology
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of Cell Biology at the University of Alberta to study the role of Cajal-Retzius cells in brain development and function. We are especially interested in: (1) the developmental programmed cell death