Postdoc: Nuclear Organization, Gene Regulation and Mouse Development

National Institutes of Health (NIH)

Bethesda, MD

Posted 2/7/2023

Our lab at the NIH is interested in understanding cell lineage differentiation, gene regulation and how non-coding DNA elements and the 3D architecture of chromosomes contribute to these processes during early mouse development.
Learn more and check out our most recent work at rochalab.nichd.nih.gov

WHAT WE OFFER
Fully-funded postdoc positions up to five years including health benefits.
Opportunity to start your own research program or lead ongoing projects.
Large, diverse and extraordinary scientific network at the NIH/Bethesda campus. The NIH research community is unparalleled in its size, diversity and resources.
 
Working at NIH offers the possibility of living in a diverse, liberal and vibrant city: Washington DC
Or  a calm residential area with great schools and good affordable housing, Bethesda and Rockville.
 
The NIH provides invaluable resources for a wide array of postdoctoral training for career-growth. Learn more about these programs at: training.nih.gov/programs/postdoc_irp  and nichd.nih.gov/about/org/dir/osd/mt/oe
 
WHO YOU ARE
You share our enthusiasm for epigenetics, gene regulation, nuclear organization and mouse development.
You have PhD-experience in one or more of the following: mouse development, mouse genetics, epigenetics, massively-parallel sequencing techniques or computational biology.
 
TO APPLY
Send the following to [email protected]:
2 paragraph cover letter explaining your scientific trajectory and why you would like to join us.
CV and email contacts for 3 references.

The NIH is dedicated to building a diverse community in its training and employment programs.

Last Updated 02/07/2023