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to revolutionize our understanding of pain mechanisms and to develop new therapies for pain relief. The group closely collaborates with Helsinki University Hospital and Karolinska Institute, Sweden. Requirements
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Laboratory (SciLifeLab) is a collaboration between four universities in Stockholm and Uppsala: Stockholm University, the Karolinska Institute, the Royal Institute of Technology, and Uppsala University
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, at the Karolinska Institute, Sweden, in a project led by Prof. Rikard Holmdahl. Duties The task involves the usage of different mice strains housed in our SPF animal house lacking certain immune receptors. Mice will
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is located at the Science for Life Laboratory in the Karolinska Institute campus. SciLifeLab is equiped with state-of-the-art instrumentation and core facilities, and is home to one of the largest
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to revolutionize our understanding of pain mechanisms and to develop new therapies for pain relief. The group closely collaborates with Helsinki University Hospital and Karolinska Institute, Sweden. Job description
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Biochemistry and Biophysics, at the Karolinska Institute, Sweden, in a project led by Prof. Rikard Holmdahl. Duties The task involves the usage of different mice strains housed in our SPF animal house lacking
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at the Cell Signalling, Immunity and Nanoimaging (CSI:Nano) Lab in SciLifeLab at Karolinska Institute led by Asst. Prof. Erdinc Sezgin. SciLifeLab and KI are excellent places to carry out basic biomedical
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. The incoming student will be part of the KI-NIH doctoral program, in which students divide their time and research efforts between Karolinska Institute and the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland
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international profile. Read at www.su.se/mbw . The Science for Life Laboratory (SciLifeLab) is a collaboration between four universities in Stockholm and Uppsala: Stockholm University, the Karolinska Institute
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, Karolinska Institute. The lab seeks to reveal mechanisms that are responsible for successful regeneration to occur in salamanders, and conversely, highlight processes that prevent comparable injury responses