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the Gurdon Institute, a centre of developmental biology and cancer research in Cambridge, and the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics. The Institute provides a stimulating environment
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reasearch assistant. We are a growing chemical-biology research group that aims to develop new molecular tools for neuroscience and cell biology. The researcher will work on different topics: (A
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degree in Plant Biology, Biochemistry, Systems Biology, Genetics, or related field. A solid foundation in molecular biology and in particular gene cloning is strictly required, alongside a willingness and
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://www.ifm.eng.cam.ac.uk/research/fiam/ ), and working closely with teams across Cambridge, Imperial, UCL, Glasgow, Birmingham, Nottingham, Liverpool and Strathclyde. The successful applicants will be supporting
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of Pharmacology. The Howarth group have broad interests, including synthetic biology, biotechnology and entrepreneurship (www.howarthgroup.org ). The project relates to engineering a protein superglue to enhance
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horticultural/technical assistance and will be able to collaborate with postdocs studying other aspects of plant-microbe interactions, plant cell biology and plant development. You will also benefit from
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developmental biology. Our group supports researchers across the institute in experimental design, analysis and presentation of high throughput data. You will work collaboratively with researchers to develop new
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, a multi-disciplinary group of scientists working on diverse areas ranging from fundamental RNA biology to metastatic cancer research and the development of new technologies. We are looking to recruit
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Girolami and other members of the Cambridge Machine Learning Group (http://mlg.eng.cam.ac.uk/ ). The project offers also collaborations with other participants of the "AI Hub in Generative Models" (UCL
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immunology and molecular biology to understand molecular mechanisms of immunity and immune suppression in cancer and inflammation. This research aims to uncover novel molecular and cellular mechanisms