Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Country
-
Field
-
in a wide range of techniques, from synthetic chemistry, biophysical, chemical biology, and cell biology. Led by Dr Rianne Lord at UEA and co-supervised by Professor Mark Webber at the Quadram
-
Primary supervisor - Professor Martin Warren This PhD opportunity is ideal for graduates in biochemistry or biomedical science with a keen interest in protein science and its application in
-
work within our circadian biology research group to contribute meaningful research that addresses challenges with a deep impact in food security, for present and future generations. You’ll also develop a
-
candidate will be trained in an array of biochemical and molecular biology techniques (e.g. cloning, recombinant protein expression, membrane protein purification, liposome reconstitution assays, protein
-
these clusters, using both native and heterologous expression systems. Environment Our lab is focussed on applying structural biology methods to understand the molecular basis of how bacteria interact with
-
science and plant-microbe interactions. This project has been shortlisted for funding by the NRPDTP. Shortlisted applicants will potentially be interviewed on 4, 5, and 6 June 2024. For further information
-
Master's degree. English Language requirement (Faculty of Science equivalent: IELTS 6.5 overall, 6 in each category). This project is awarded with a 4-year Norwich Research Park Biosciences Doctoral Training
-
, sexual orientation, age or social background. Entry requirements At least UK equivalence Bachelors (Honours) 2:1 or UK equivalence Master's degree. English Language requirement (Faculty of Science
-
, sexual orientation, age or social background. Entry requirements At least UK equivalence Bachelors (Honours) 2:1 or UK equivalence Master's degree. English Language requirement (Faculty of Science
-
on the renowned Norwich Research Park including the University of East Anglia, the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital, John Innes Centre, the Sainsbury Laboratory and the Earlham Institute. Our team are also