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at the University of Nottingham in collaboration with Erebagen Ltd to screen engineered bacterial natural product libraries for anti-cancer activity using native mass spectrometry. This exciting project is supervised
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. They should have expertise in HPLC, the interpretation of NMR and Mass spectrometry data as well as significant experience in synthetic organic chemistry. Practical experience in enzyme assays would also be
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are: Does fertilizer placement play a key role in crop establishment? Native mass spectrometry for the discovery of new anticancer agents Requirements Applications are invited from students with backgrounds
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at the fore of both frailty (the clinical term encompassing loss of resilience) and sarcopenia (age-associated losses of muscle mass and function) definitions. A devastating consequence of reduced
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to work on an MRC funded project – Muscle Mass and The Menopause: Gender-specific Strategies To Mitigate Sarcopenia In Aging Populations. The role is focussed on the delivery of a human volunteer study
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the areas of: Sustainable/resilient chemical supply chains Artificial Intelligence /Machine Learning for the prediction of bulk properties in performance molecules and materials Synthetic electrochemical
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makes people's health and strength worse overall. Colorectal cancer patients also lose significant amounts of mass and have a high levels of inflammation, both of which are linked to worse long-term
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applications Supervisory team: Dr Marco Simonelli Dr Ian Maskery Project description The vision for next-generation Additive Manufacturing (AM) is to control the composition of every deposited volume to make
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Communications for our leading Faculty of Engineering, to deliver ambitious goals for reputation, research and student recruitment. This is a fast paced, high-volume role with exciting and inspiring subject matter
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associated central nervous system (CNS) dysfunction are linked to current and future physical inactivity. They lead to muscle weakness, mass loss and impaired neuromuscular control. Factors related to the CNS