Combining functional epigenomics with single-cell sequencing in cancer & immunity (ERC-funded post-doc)



    A detailed PDF version of this job posting is available from the following URL:
    http://epigenomics.cemm.oeaw.ac.at/files/Job_Posting_Postdoc_Functional_Epigenomics.pdf

    Combining functional epigenomics with single-cell sequencing in cancer & immunity (ERC-funded post-doc)

    On a project funded by the European Research Council (ERC) we are recruiting a wet-lab or a bioinformatics postdoc who wants to pioneer new technologies for large-scale functional dissection and cellular reprogramming, and to apply them for cutting-edge re-search in epigenetics, cancer biology, or immune diseases.
    Our group is based at the CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine of the Austrian Academy of Sciences in Vienna. It com-bines a strong focus on high-throughput biology (epigenomics, single-cell sequencing, drug screening, mass spectrometry, imaging, etc.) with a deep interest in computational modeling. We are working closely with physicians at the Vienna General Hospital and the Medical University of Vienna to advance personalized/precision medicine.

    The Project
    Building upon a breakthrough technology for pooled CRISPR screening with single-cell transcriptome read-out (preprint available online: http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/10/27/083774), we seek to decipher complex biological pathways and gene-regulatory networks in high throughout, overcoming the classical “one gene, one postdoc” paradigm. We are particularly interested in epigenetic regulation, cancer biology, and immune diseases – but also very open to other project ideas and interesting biological models (including in vivo studies and translational research). For example, we use single-cell technology to dissecting functional heterogeneity and drug resistance in cancer, and we are pursuing an engineering-inspired “build it to understand it” approach to cancer epigenetics, where we combine CRISPR epigenome editing and computationally designed drug combinations to rationally reprogram normal cells into cancer cells and vice versa.

    The Candidate
    We are looking for highly motivated and academically outstanding candidates who want to pursue a scientific career at the frontier of biomedical research. A strong candidate would have a wet-lab (e.g., functional genomics, chemical biology, human genetics, molecular medicine, etc.) or a computational background (bioinformatics, statistics, physics, engineering, etc.) and a strong interest in interdisci-plinary collaboration. We are fully equipped and experienced with wet-lab and computational work, thus allowing candidates to get the best of both worlds and establish a unique skill set that will allow them to effectively combine wet-lab and bioinformatics in their future group.

    The Lab (http://epigenomics.cemm.oeaw.ac.at/)
    The Medical Epigenomics Lab at CeMM pursues an interdisciplinary and highly collaborative research program aimed at understanding the cancer epigenome and establishing its utility for precision medicine. The lab is internationally well-connected and active in several fields:
    • Epigenomics. We perform large-scale epigenome mapping in order to dissect the dynamics of cancer development and emerging drug resistance. This work is part of the International Human Epigenome Consortium.
    • Technology. Exciting biomedical research is often driven by new technologies. Our lab is therefore heavily invested into tech-nology development, including single-cell protocols, nanopore sequencing, CRISPR, and epigenome editing.
    • Bioinformatics. New algorithms and advanced computational methods allow us to accurately infer epigenetic cell states from large-scale datasets, in order to reconstruct the epigenetic landscape that controls cellular differentiation and reprogram-ming.
    • Diagnostics. Using large-scale DNA methylation mapping, bioinformatic prioritization, and functional characterization, we strive to develop clinically relevant biomarkers for informing personalized cancer therapy.

    The Principal Investigator (https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=9qSsTcIAAAAJ)
    Christoph Bock is a principal investigator at CeMM. He is also a guest professor at the Medical University of Vienna’s Department for Laboratory Medicine, scientific coordinator of the Biomedical Sequencing Facility at CeMM, and an adjunct group leader for bioinfor-matics at the Max Planck Institute for Informatics. Christoph Bock obtained his PhD summa cum laude from Saarland University and the Max Planck Institute for Informatics in 2008, followed by three years of postdoctoral research at the Broad Institute of MIT and Har-vard, where he contributed to the NIH Roadmap Epigenomics project. At CeMM, he co-initiated and leads Genom Austria, the Austrian contribution to the International Network of Personal Genome Projects, and he has been a principal investigator in BLUEPRINT (Inter-national Human Epigenome Consortium). He has received several research awards, including the Max Planck Society’s Otto Hahn Medal (2009), a New Frontier Group grant by the Austrian Academy of Sciences (2015-2020), and an ERC Starting Grant (2016-2021).

    The Institute (http://www.cemm.at/)
    CeMM is an international research institute of the Austrian Academy of Sciences and a founding member of EU-LIFE. It has an outstand-ing track record of top-notch science (last five years: 10 papers in Nature/Cell/Science/NEJM, >20 papers in Nature/Cell sister jour-nals) and medical translation. With just over a hundred researchers, CeMM provides a truly collaborative and personal environment, while maintaining critical mass and all relevant technologies. Research at CeMM focuses on cancer, inflammation, and immune disor-ders. CeMM is located at the center of one of the largest medical campuses in Europe, within walking distance of Vienna’s historical city center. A study by “The Scientist” placed CeMM among the top-5 best places to work in academia world-wide (http://the-scientist.com/2012/08/01/best-places-to-work-academia-2012). Vienna is frequently ranked the world’s best city to live. It is a Unit-ed Nations city with a large English-speaking community. The official language at CeMM is English, and more than 30 different nation-alities are represented at the institute.

    Please apply online (https://cemm.jobbase.io/job/ggla1fbm) with cover letter, CV, academic transcripts, and contact details of 3 refer-ees. Applications will be reviewed on a rolling basis. Any application received by 22 January 2017 will be considered. Start dates are very flexible.


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