254 International Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology positions at University of Groningen
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Field
-
Assistant Professor International Business (Career Track: Education Profile) (0,8–1,0 FTE) (V24.0138) « Back to the overview Job description The Department of Global Economics & Management in
-
explore the effectivity of a cell-specific therapeutic approach. Organization The vacancy is within the groups of Prof. Dr. Klaas Poelstra and Prof. Dr. Peter Olinga at the Groningen Research Institute
-
degree in Medical Biology, Pharmacy, Pharmaceutical Sciences or a related field research experience in the field of molecular biology, preferably with experience in qPCR, western blotting, FACS
-
roots in biophysics, biochemistry & molecular biology, cell biology, chemistry, computational biology, microbiology or genetics are organized in two focal areas: ‘Molecular Mechanisms of Biological
-
, pumps and transporters. Living cells maintain chemical gradients and electrical potential differences across their membranes using proteins that represent the majority of all current drug targets
-
, pumps and transporters. Living cells maintain chemical gradients and electrical potential differences across their membranes using proteins that represent the majority of all current drug targets
-
to modern health challenges. Organisation The position we are offering will be within the Active Molecular Systems, supervised by Prof. Nathalie Katsonis, and will be embedded in the Stratingh Institute
-
carried out by integral membrane protein channels, receptors, pumps and transporters. Living cells maintain chemical gradients and electrical potential differences across their membranes using proteins
-
at the Groningen Research Institute of Pharmacy, Faculty of Science and Engineering, University of Groningen. The ERC-funded (ERC Synergy GRAIL) project aims at providing molecular basis for the instant
-
carried out by integral membrane protein channels, receptors, pumps and transporters. Living cells maintain chemical gradients and electrical potential differences across their membranes using proteins