Research Associate in Molecular Oncology
- Employer
- University of Bristol
- Location
- Bristol, United Kingdom
- Salary
- £34,304 - £38,587
- Closing date
- Jun 18, 2022
View more
- Sector
- Science, Life Sciences, Cell and Molecular Biology, Pharmaceutical, Business Development
- Hours
- Full Time
- Organization Type
- University and College
- Jobseeker Type
- Academic (e.g. 'Lecturer')
You need to sign in or create an account to save a job.
The role
We are seeking a highly motivated and enthusiastic Postdoctoral Research Associate for our Children's Cancer & Leukamia Group/Little Princess Trust funded research project to study Combined inhibition of autophagy and epigenetics as a novel therapeutic strategy for poor prognosis neuroblastoma. The project is a collaboration with with Prof. Chesler (Institute of Cancer Research, London).
What will you be doing?
This project will require a strong understanding of cancer biology, including apoptosis, autophagy, epigenetics and drug discovery. The applicant will be expected to show strong initiative and be responsible for the planning, execution and analysis of the project's experiments. In addition to molecular/biochemical/cell biology techniques, the project will require expert bioinformatic analyses (RNAseq and proteomics).
You should apply if
A relevant PhD. You need to possess high-level molecular/biochemical/cell biology practical skills, including ChIP, co-immunoprecipitation, qPCR, alternative splicing analysis, western-blotting, tissue-culture, confocal microscopy, immunocytochemistry, flow cytometry. You should also have practical experience of drug synergy analyses and bioinformatics for RNAseq and proteomics.
For informal enquiries please contact Professor Karim Malik ( k.t.a.malik@bristol.ac.uk ).
We welcome applications from all members of our community and are particularly encouraging those from diverse groups, such as members of the LGBT+ and BAME communities, to join us.
We are seeking a highly motivated and enthusiastic Postdoctoral Research Associate for our Children's Cancer & Leukamia Group/Little Princess Trust funded research project to study Combined inhibition of autophagy and epigenetics as a novel therapeutic strategy for poor prognosis neuroblastoma. The project is a collaboration with with Prof. Chesler (Institute of Cancer Research, London).
What will you be doing?
This project will require a strong understanding of cancer biology, including apoptosis, autophagy, epigenetics and drug discovery. The applicant will be expected to show strong initiative and be responsible for the planning, execution and analysis of the project's experiments. In addition to molecular/biochemical/cell biology techniques, the project will require expert bioinformatic analyses (RNAseq and proteomics).
You should apply if
A relevant PhD. You need to possess high-level molecular/biochemical/cell biology practical skills, including ChIP, co-immunoprecipitation, qPCR, alternative splicing analysis, western-blotting, tissue-culture, confocal microscopy, immunocytochemistry, flow cytometry. You should also have practical experience of drug synergy analyses and bioinformatics for RNAseq and proteomics.
For informal enquiries please contact Professor Karim Malik ( k.t.a.malik@bristol.ac.uk ).
We welcome applications from all members of our community and are particularly encouraging those from diverse groups, such as members of the LGBT+ and BAME communities, to join us.
You need to sign in or create an account to save a job.
Get job alerts
Create a job alert and receive personalized job recommendations straight to your inbox.
Create alert