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Research Associate

King's College London

City Of London

On-site

GBP 46,000

Full time

Today
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Job summary

A prestigious university is seeking a motivated Postdoctoral Research Associate to investigate innate immune responses to bacterial pathogens. The role involves developing independent research projects, focusing on calcium-regulated kinases' role in infection. Candidates should hold a PhD in relevant fields, with expertise in cell biology and molecular microbiology, and have experience in mammalian cell culture and molecular techniques. A strong research background is essential, and the role offers a fixed-term contract for 2 years.

Qualifications

  • PhD in cell biology or molecular microbiology is essential.
  • Strong research track record demonstrated through publications.
  • Experience with mammalian cell culture and molecular biology techniques.
  • Expertise in cell signalling or infection biology required.
  • Ability to design and analyze experiments independently.

Responsibilities

  • Lead a high-impact project on calcium-regulated kinases during infection.
  • Develop an independent research project using molecular and cellular approaches.
  • Map infection-driven signalling networks.
  • Contribute to data and writing for peer-reviewed manuscripts.

Skills

Cell biology
Molecular microbiology
Mammalian cell culture
Cell signalling
Research design and analysis

Education

PhD in cell biology, molecular microbiology, or related discipline

Tools

Advanced fluorescence microscopy
Omics-based techniques
Job description
About the role

The Odendall Laboratory investigates innate immune responses to enteric bacterial pathogens, with a particular focus on the pathways that integrate microbial detection with inflammatory signalling. Our aim is to understand how pathogens such as Salmonella and Shigella are sensed by host cells, and how bacteria subvert these processes to promote infection.

Among these regulatory nodes are calcium-regulated kinases, including the calmodulin-regulated kinase CaMKII, which we and others have found to be activated during infection and targeted by bacterial effectors (Alphonse et al, Cell 2022). Our recent work shows that CaMKII is required for signalling downstream of multiple innate immune receptors, highlighting it as a central node in the host–pathogen interface.

We are seeking a motivated and driven Postdoctoral Research Associate with a strong cell biology and molecular microbiology skillset to lead a high-impact project investigating how calcium-regulated kinases control cell signalling pathways during infection and how pathogens manipulate these processes. The post-holder will develop an independent research project using molecular and cellular approaches to map infection-driven signalling networks. They will have opportunities to employ advanced live-cell imaging in collaboration with the Advanced Microscopy platform at the Francis Crick Institute, as well as transcriptomic and proteomic approaches to define the downstream pathways controlled by these kinases.

The successful candidate will join a team within the Department of Infectious Diseases, a collaborative and supportive environment with strong links across King’s and the Francis Crick Institute. Applicants should hold a PhD in cell biology, molecular microbiology, or a related discipline. Experience with mammalian cell culture and molecular biology is essential, and expertise in advanced fluorescence microscopy is strongly desired. A strong interest in innate immunity and host–pathogen interactions, and the ability to work both independently and collaboratively, are essential. The candidate will be expected to contribute data and writing to peer-reviewed manuscripts and will be supported for applications for independent fellowships towards the end of the post.

This is a full-time post (35 hours per week), and you will be offered a fixed-term contract for 2 years.

About You

To be successful in this role, we are looking for candidates to have the following skills and experience:

Essential criteria
  • PhD in cell biology, molecular microbiology, or a related discipline *
  • Strong research track record, evidenced by peer-reviewed publications or preprints
  • Experience with mammalian cell culture and molecular biology techniques
  • Demonstrated expertise in cell signalling or infection biology
  • Proven ability to design, implement, and analyse experiments independently

* Please note that this is a PhD level role but candidates who have submitted their thesis and are awaiting award of their PhDs will be considered. In these circumstances the appointment will be made at Grade 5, spine point 30 with the title of Research Assistant. Upon confirmation of the award of the PhD, the job title will become Research Associate and the salary will increase to Grade 6.

Desirable criteria
  • Experience with advanced fluorescence microscopy (e.g. live-cell imaging, FLIM/FRET, biosensors)
  • Experience with bacterial infection models (Salmonella, Shigella, or similar)
  • Experience with omics-based techniques (e.g. phosphoproteomics, transcriptomics)
  • Skills in computational analysis of imaging or omics datasets

£45,031 per annum, including London Weighting Allowance. Grade 6

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