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Publish date: 95 / 05 / 02 | Rating: Article Rating

SCIENCE-JOBS-DE

PhD student in Molecular Cardiology (Tubingen)

The Department of Cardiology, Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen is seeking

1 PhD student in Molecular Cardiology.

Our laboratory is interested in molecular mechanisms of familial forms of heart failure, in particular in the pathogenesis of dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and the development of novel therapeutic strategies to combat heart failure.

The position will involve application of a state-of-the-art methodology (incl iPS and CRISPR/cas technology) for identifying and antagonizing molecular mechanisms of heart failure in the human and mouse setting.
The successful candidates will have the opportunity to present their data on national and international conferences.

Your profile:
• University degree biology, molecular/cell biology, or a related field
• Experience in molecular and cellular techniques
• Highly motivated to learn new methodology, organized, and intellectually
curious
• Fluency in English and basic knowledge in German
• Enjoys working in a young, multi-disciplinary team

The positions are available immediately, are supported by a grant of the BMBF and are initially limited to 3 years.

Tübingen University, situated in the centre of Europe is a reputed and renowned address for international students. We offer a stimulating environment in a young research group. Please send a CV, copies of high school exam and university exams, and contact details of 2-3 referees along with a cover letter stating your reasons for applying to

 Dr Michael Gramlich, email: michael.gramlich@med.uni-tuebingen.de.

Related publications:
Gerull B*, Gramlich M*,  Atherton J et al. (2002). Mutation of TTN, encoding the giant filament titin, cause familial dilated cardiomyopathy. Nat Gen 30(2):201-204.

Gramlich M, Michely B, Krohne C, et al. (2009). Stress-induced dilated cardiomyopathy in a knock-in mouse model mimicking human titin-based disease. JMCC 47(3): 352-8.

Gramlich M, Pane S, Zhou Q, et al. (2015).  Antisense-mediated Exon Skipping: a Therapeutic Strategy for Titin-based Dilated Cardiomyopathy. EMBO Mol Med., 2015

Michael Gramlich
michael.gramlich@med.uni-tuebingen.de
Universität Tübingen, Abteilung für Kardiologie
Tübingen

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