Postdoctoral Associate - Neal Laboratory
Broad Institute | |
United States, Massachusetts, Cambridge | |
Nov 19, 2024 | |
Description & Requirements The Broad
The Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard is one of the world's leading biomedical research institutes. It seeks to discover the molecular basis of major human diseases, develop effective new approaches to diagnostics and therapeutics, and disseminate discoveries, tools, methods, and data openly to the entire scientific community. Founded in 2004, the Broad Institute includes faculty, professional staff, and students from throughout the MIT and Harvard biomedical research communities, with collaborations spanning the globe.
The Lab
The Neal laboratory (www.neallab.org) within the Broad Institute's Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Genomic Mechanisms of Disease has an exciting opportunity for a postdoctoral associate to join a diverse multidisciplinary group performing cutting-edge research on the molecular, cellular and genetic mechanisms of cancer and cardiometabolic disease. This individual will play an essential role in the team's efforts to advance the translation of disease genetics into an understanding of underlying molecular and cellular disease mechanisms and identification of actionable therapeutic hypotheses.
Job Requirements
We are seeking a creative, proactive, resourceful, and highly-motivated individual to lead research efforts aimed at understanding gene regulatory networks and cellular programs affecting disease development in cancer and cardiometabolic disorders. The successful candidate will apply a variety of cutting-edge technologies, including the latest in genome engineering, CRISPR-based screens, pooled optical screens, single-cell sequencing-based approaches and high-content imaging to dissect molecular mechanisms and characterize the phenotype of disease-relevant cell models.
This position will be an integral part of a multidisciplinary team and, thus, will require close collaboration with experimental and computational scientists to achieve the main goal of determining the fundamental mechanisms by which genes and genetic variants contribute to disease. The candidate will address fundamental scientific questions, formulate hypotheses, design and execute experiments, analyze and interpret data, train and mentor junior colleagues, and write and publish original papers, often in close collaboration with other lab members and internal or external collaborators.
Minimum Qualifications
Preferred Qualifications
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