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From Zebrafish Tales to Human Interventions: Unveiling Inflammatory Pathways via RNA Binding Proteins in Neutrophil Biology School of Medicine and Population Health PhD Research Project Competition
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Evolution of virulence in the human fungal pathogen Cryptococcus neoformans in response to extreme weather events School of Medicine and Population Health PhD Research Project Competition Funded
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How well can mice reproduce human frailty? School of Medicine and Population Health PhD Research Project Competition Funded Students Worldwide Prof I Bellantuono Application Deadline: 26 June 2024
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How well can mice reproduce human frailty?
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-specialised mechanical seals for high-pressure hydrogen generation, storage and use, a cornerstone of renewable energy solutions. Mechanical seals have a rotating ceramic face pressed against a stationary face
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bacteria, antimicrobial resistance is a major and increasing problem for fungi. Cryptococcus neoformans is a human fungal pathogen, with >100,000 estimated annual deaths. Individuals with late-stage HIV
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improve vaccine design and/or scheduling.What are the aims? The aims of this project are to analyse blood samples from 3 human clinical trials. You will use sophisticated multi-colour flow cytometry
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targets for therapeutic intervention. To do this you will use laboratory-grown, tissue engineered skin that closely mimics the structure and function of human skin. You will make and then use skin cells
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the absence of telomerase, and how these correlate with gut repair capacity, using zebrafish and human samples. This is a multidisciplinary project, with state-of-the-art methodology, from advanced microscopy
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elucidate the mechanisms by which vascular endothelial PKD1 regulates aneurysm development in ADPKD patients. To this aim, they will use in vitro (primary human endothelial cells) and ex vivo approaches