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A leading UK university in Oxford is seeking a talented Postdoctoral Research Associate to join a project investigating immune checkpoint receptors' role in T-cell activation. This full-time position involves designing experiments in preclinical models, detailed T-cell assays, and collaboration in a highly interdisciplinary lab. Ideal applicants will have a PhD or be near completion in immunology, with expertise in in vivo mouse models and T-cell functionality.
The Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine (WIMM), John Radcliffe Hospital, Headington, Oxford. The laboratory of Prof. Simon Davis and Dr. Mafalda Santos at the MRC Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine (WIMM), University of Oxford, is seeking a talented and motivated Postdoctoral Research Associate to join an MRC-funded project investigating how immune checkpoint receptors regulate T-cell activation and function.
Project Overview: This project focuses on understanding the molecular mechanisms by which co-inhibitory receptors, including PD-1, BTLA, TIGIT, and CD200R, regulate T cell function in autoimmune settings. Despite sharing common downstream signalling components such as SHP1 and SHP2 phosphatases, these receptors exhibit strikingly different signalling capacities in disease settings. While these receptors are well known for their roles in cancer and infection, their involvement in preventing immune-mediated pathology in autoimmunity remains poorly understood. Using genetic and antibody-based targeting, we aim to dissect how these pathways modulate T-cell signalling, activation, and effector functions in preclinical models of autoimmunity. This research is part of a broader effort to define how inhibitory receptors tune T-cell responses in health and disease, ultimately informing the development of more precise immunotherapies.
The T-cell Biology Group is part of the MRC WIMM, a leading biomedical research institute embedded within the Radcliffe Department of Medicine. We are situated in a highly interdisciplinary environment with outstanding facilities for mouse work, flow cytometry, genomics, and molecular biology. We maintain close collaborations with immunologists, structural biologists, and clinicians.
We are seeking a creative immunologist with a strong interest in T cell biology and immune regulation. The ideal candidate will have:
This is a full-time post based at the WIMM, University of Oxford and fixed-term for 1 year in the first instance.