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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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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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, 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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technologies to challenge human health problems. The Center translates its novel technologies and insights to widely applicable research tools, vaccines, diagnostics and biopharmaceuticals. Our research pushes
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the growth of the dynamic life sciences cluster in Flanders. VIB scientists study the molecular mechanisms that regulate the functions of the human body, plants and microorganisms. Such mechanistic research
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tissue biology. Main activities Act as main point for EM consultancy in life science research environment. Discuss experimental setup, including sample preparation, acquisition preferences and image
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researcher passionate about exploring human-associated microbial communities. The ideal candidate possesses the following qualifications: MSc degree in microbiology, molecular biology, biotechnology
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the project and act at the interface of omics technology implementation, bioinformatic pipeline development and (pre)clinical assay validation. About TOBI Lab The overarching goal of the TOBI team is to enhance
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and treatment methods for these diseases. Approaches range from human genetics and genomics to protein biochemistry and neuronal and immune and glial cell biology, while models include yeast, fly, mouse