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Research UK Senior Research Fellow, University of Oxford. This lab is a satellite lab of the Laboratory of Molecular Neurodegeneration headed by Professor Richard Wade-Martins. The Research Assistant will
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principles. Experience of relevant laboratory skills e.g. molecular biology such as PCR and preparation of libraries for next generation sequencing, preparation of primary cells and tissue culture, flow
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related area. Previous exposure to laboratory environments. Experience with molecular biology techniques, such as genotyping, protein extraction and Western blots. Hands on experience with rodent
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to nucleic acid extraction or imaging. You will employ a combination of molecular biology techniques including RNA and DNA extraction, and will assist with library preparation for NGS and with multiplex
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and capable for working independently in a laboratory. Having experience in molecular biology techniques is highly desirable. Applications for this vacancy are to be made online and you will be required
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small scale project management, to co-ordination of multiple aspects of work to meet deadlines. It is essential that you hold a PhD/DPhil (or close to completion) in Neuroscience, Biology, Molecular
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and characterisation of novel monoclonal antibodies, molecular biology, virology, Good Clinical Practice (GCP), and/or the use of animal models is highly desirable, as is experience of managing and
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to develop correlative technologies to visualize integration targeting by cryoET in situ. You will be managing the project day-to-day, including both design and action of strategies in molecular biology and
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findings from our labs that identified a novel link between extreme cooling and the circadian clock. We aim to exploit these insights to unravel the molecular mechanisms that underpin the rhythmic expression
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in the human and mouse intestine. You will be applying a range of molecular biology techniques (e.g., single cell/spatial transcriptomics & proteomics) to profile patient cohort samples and mouse