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ALLSTAT  April 2013

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Subject:

JOB - Posdoctoral Fellowship in Biostatistics

From:

Bori Gerle <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Bori Gerle <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Fri, 5 Apr 2013 17:18:16 +0100

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Dear All,

My lab is looking for a postdoctoral fellow in biostatistics. See the advert below.

Best regards,
Bori

Postdoctoral Fellowships in Biostatistics
Luscombe Laboratory for Computational Biology
Cancer Research UK London Research Institute
www.luscombelab.org
 
Job ID: POS00118
URL: http://tinyurl.com/caqx5q8
Closing date: 30 April 2013
 
We seek a talented and motivated biostatistician to join Nick Luscombe’s Laboratory of Computational Biology in London, UK.
 
The laboratory is happy, international and interactive, consisting of ~10 students and post-docs from all over Europe. Members come from a wide range of educational backgrounds, including biology, chemistry and computer science. Lab members also participate in regular exchanges with our smaller group in Okinawa, Japan.
 
Finally, our postdocs have an excellent track record of moving onto independent PI positions.
 
 
Our research
Our research takes a genomic, integrative approach to understand gene regulation and evolution. We use datasets including genome sequences, gene expression, ChIP-seq, iCLIP and HiC data to gain insights into:
1) How gene expression is controlled;
2) How this system regulates biologically important behaviours;
3) And how a breakdown in this system leads to human diseases.
 
These are novel, large-scale, complex datasets that demand extensive mining, and development of new statistical methods for analysis.
 
As part of our recent move to the LRI, we are increasingly focusing towards understanding gene regulation and evolution in the context of human diseases and cancer.
 
Recent research successes include: investigations of evolutionary processes in bacterial genomes (Martincorena et al, Nature 2012); mechanisms of epigenetic regulation in sex determination (Conrad et al, Science 2012); qualitative models of nucleosome-positioning and transcriptional regulation (Zaugg & Luscombe, Genome Res 2012); and a new mechanism to suppress aberrant exon formation (Zarnack et al, Cell 2013).
 
 
Ongoing projects
Ongoing projects address the following questions.  All of these topics require the development of novel statistical approaches.
· How do we measure spatial organisation of chromosomes in the nucleus using HiC techniques?
· How does this chromosomal arrangement affect gene activities, and do chromosomes rearrange themselves between different cellular conditions?
· Which regions of the genome do regulatory proteins bind, and how do they control gene activities?
· How do their binding patterns change over time?
· How do these regulatory processes alter or break down during diseases such as bacterial infections and cancer progression?
 
Though our main research focus is genomics and transcriptional regulation, the laboratory is open to people who wish to develop research on other related areas of computational biology and biostatistics. People are given freedom to work on problems that interest them.
 
 
Wet/dry collaborations
The successful applicant will work closely with one of our collaborators producing primary data types, including Peter Fraser (HiC, nuclear organisation) and Jernej Ule (iCLIP, protein-RNA networks). We are also building new collaborations with colleagues at the LRI.
 
 
About you
The ideal candidate will have recently completed or be completing a PhD degree in Computational Biology (bioinformatics, systems biology) or biostatistics. Applicants must have a proven publication record.
 
Fluency in Linux, and excellent knowledge in a programming language is expected (Perl, Python, C/C++, R/BioConductor, MatLab etc). Prior experience with handling genome-scale data is advantageous: examples include genome sequence and high-throughput-sequencing data for a range of research applications such as gene expression, protein-DNA/RNA binding, and chromatin conformation measurements.
 
Postdocs are expected to develop and lead projects, and help supervise junior members of the laboratory. The ability to work in a team is essential.
 

About the London Research Institute and Francis Crick Institute
The LRI has an international reputation for cutting edge research into basic biology and it is committed to training the next generation of research scientists. The four-year LRI Postdoctoral Programme is part of this commitment, and nearly half of Postdoctoral Fellows leave to set up their own research groups. Postdocs also benefit from living and working in one of the world’s greatest scientific, cultural and cosmopolitan capital cities.
 
The LRI will become part of the Francis Crick Institute in 2015, which will be an entirely new institute with a distinctive vision of how biomedical research is conducted. It will be one of the most significant projects in UK biomedical science for a generation.
 

How to Apply
All applications should be made via the Cancer Research UK careers website, where you will need to create a profile before you can submit an application.

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