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11576 - Postdoctoral Scientist in in vivo chromatin perturbation and profiling
Dyddiad hysbysebu: | 05 Tachwedd 2024 |
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Cyflog: | £40,247 i £47,874 bob blwyddyn |
Oriau: | Llawn Amser |
Dyddiad cau: | 19 Tachwedd 2024 |
Lleoliad: | Edinburgh, Scotland |
Gweithio o bell: | Hybrid - gweithio o bell hyd at 2 ddiwrnod yr wythnos |
Cwmni: | University of Edinburgh |
Math o swydd: | Dros dro |
Cyfeirnod swydd: | 11576 |
Crynodeb
Grade UE07: £40,247 to £47,874 per annum
Institute of Genetics and Cancer / Edinburgh Cancer Research / MRC-Human Genetics Unit / School of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine
Full time: 35 hours per week
Fixed Term: for 12 months (Starting February 1st 2025)
We are looking for an ambitious, motivated Postdoctoral researcher to join a dynamic research program discovering how chromatin regulation is altered in childhood cancer.
The Opportunity:
The successful candidate will work in a dynamic research group focused on understanding how altering the normal processes of chromatin and epigenetic regulation supports oncogenic gene expression programs in childhood sarcoma. You will integrate into a multi-disciplinary research environment where we seek to translate our fundamental discoveries toward the development and implementation of improved therapies for these often-underserved diseases. In this role, you will use cutting-edge genomics approaches to study the function of how essential chromatin regulatory complexes support oncogenic gene expression. Discovering important aspects of how these complexes function in cancer cells, will allow us to begin to develop novel therapeutic strategies to subvert their function(s).
Your skills and attributes for success: (insert up to 5 top criteria)
Expertise in chromatin biology and epigenetics
Expertise in functional genomics
Expertise using in vivo experimental systems
Effective communication skills
Strong publication record
Institute of Genetics and Cancer / Edinburgh Cancer Research / MRC-Human Genetics Unit / School of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine
Full time: 35 hours per week
Fixed Term: for 12 months (Starting February 1st 2025)
We are looking for an ambitious, motivated Postdoctoral researcher to join a dynamic research program discovering how chromatin regulation is altered in childhood cancer.
The Opportunity:
The successful candidate will work in a dynamic research group focused on understanding how altering the normal processes of chromatin and epigenetic regulation supports oncogenic gene expression programs in childhood sarcoma. You will integrate into a multi-disciplinary research environment where we seek to translate our fundamental discoveries toward the development and implementation of improved therapies for these often-underserved diseases. In this role, you will use cutting-edge genomics approaches to study the function of how essential chromatin regulatory complexes support oncogenic gene expression. Discovering important aspects of how these complexes function in cancer cells, will allow us to begin to develop novel therapeutic strategies to subvert their function(s).
Your skills and attributes for success: (insert up to 5 top criteria)
Expertise in chromatin biology and epigenetics
Expertise in functional genomics
Expertise using in vivo experimental systems
Effective communication skills
Strong publication record