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the life sciences and have access to its state-of-the-art high-throughput computing facilities. Profile We are looking for a motivated postdoctoral researcher interested in studying human-associated
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PhD position: Linking neurodevelopmental disorders and mitochondria in human neurons, using iPSC and xenotransplantation We are looking for an ambitious PhD student with a broad interest in
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Postdoctoral position available to study human-specific molecular mechanisms of neuronal development
study the human-specific mechanisms of development and function of cortical neurons. Join us to undertake a highly interdisciplinary project focusing on one exciting question: « What makes our brain human
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, with a focus on the human brain. You will engineer new AI models to predict cell-type specific expression of all protein-coding genes in the genome, across diverse cell types in different regions
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and technologies to challenge human health problems. The Center translates its novel technologies and insights to widely applicable research tools, vaccines, diagnostics and biopharmaceuticals. Our
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mechanism and the generation of granulo-vacuolar bodies in neurons. The candidate will use human iPS cells both in vitro and in vivo using xenografted mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease (see Balusu et al
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clinical human liver samples. This will be complemented with tailored spatial multi-omic panels of RNA & Protein markers that enable identifying each of the cells within the tissue, their activation states
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the operations manager in overseeing day-to-day operations, in areas of human resources, finance, event organization and others. This role requires a proactive individual with excellent communication skills and
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-standard research with cells and tissues of animal and human origin, both in BL1 and BL2 conditions. We provide this via a suite of instruments, high manufacturing standards of cell culture media, sterility
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from human genetics, genomics, protein biochemistry and neuronal and glial cell biology to integrative systems and computational biology. Models include yeast, fly, mouse, and pluripotent human cell