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Centre for Nature Recovery and also of the Flourishing and Wellbeing Theme of the Oxford Health Biomedical Research Centre. As the PDRA (Postdoctoral Researcher), your main activities will involve managing
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. The main focus of the project are to assess how dietary proteins and associated indicators, including circulating proteins found in the blood, may influence the development of common age-related diseases
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the PDRA (Postdoctoral Researcher), your main activities will involve managing academic research, including coordinating multiple aspects of work to meet deadlines and desired goals. This will involve
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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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interest in laboratory research and academic aspects of myasthenia gravis, an understanding of the main ethical questions and guiding principles in regards to patient data protection and evidence of previous
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work, including design, experiments, and extensive experience with human primary or stem cell culture, is essential. You will have excellent communication skills and a proven track record in authorship
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substantial body of work already performed by this team, but the main objective is to enable these calculations to find use in the early hit-to-lead stages of drug-design. This is a full-time fixed-term post up
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the main aim to develop the next generation of sensing technologies and Artificial Intelligence (AI) models to construct new personalised biomarkers of health in the context of evidence-based
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will be tasked with supervising and developing other members of the team, including research assistants, DPhil students, and Masters students. You will be contributing to other research areas within
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, Kukura, and Qing. The team is focussed on the integration of three main technologies (nanopore sensing, mass photometry, and escape-time electrometry) to perform multidimensional analyses of proteins