Start Date
Immediate
Expiry Date
24 Oct, 25
Salary
56345.0
Posted On
24 Jul, 25
Experience
0 year(s) or above
Remote Job
Yes
Telecommute
Yes
Sponsor Visa
No
Skills
Good communication skills
Industry
Information Technology/IT
WHAT WE ARE LOOKING FOR
We are seeking a motivated and enthusiastic chemical biologist. This project will be multidisciplinary, involving synthetic and peptide chemistry, biophysical characterisation of peptide hits, structural biology and cell biology. We are therefore seeking someone with experience in a selection of these techniques and a willingness to learn others as dictated by the project. Experience with the synthesis, optimisation and testing of peptides is essential and experience with mRNA display screening, general molecular biology approaches and biophysical/biochemical assay would be desirable.
AVAILABLE DOCUMENTS
Attached documents are available under links. Clicking a document link will initialize its download.
Please note that job descriptions are not exhaustive, and you may be asked to take on additional duties that align with the key responsibilities mentioned above.
We reserve the right to close the advert prior to the closing date stated should we receive a high volume of applications. It is therefore advisable that you submit your application as early as possible to avoid disappointment.
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ABOUT THE ROLE
We are looking for a researcher in chemical biology to contribute to developing an exciting new cyclic peptide discovery approach to make inhibitors of therapeutically relevant, intrinsically disordered proteins during translation. This is an exciting opportunity to be part of an ongoing collaboration between the Walport laboratory and Dr David Balchin’s laboratory at the Francis Crick Institute.
WHAT YOU WOULD BE DOING
This post is to work in the Walport lab based at the Molecular Sciences Research Hub within the Chemistry Department at Imperial College London, whilst collaborating closely with the Balchin Lab based at the Francis Crick Institute. The Walport lab is a highly interdisciplinary lab that uses a wide variety of techniques, spanning from synthetic and peptide chemistry to cell biology, to produce peptide-based chemical tools to study biomedically important proteins. Dr Balchin’s laboratory focuses on understanding the mechanisms of protein biogenesis on the ribosome using biochemical reconstitution and structural proteomics.
You will have the opportunity to work between both laboratories and will apply a wide range of techniques in peptide chemistry, protein biochemistry, chemical biology, biophysics and cell biology.
You will join a vibrant research group to develop cyclic peptide inhibitors of a challenging intrinsically disordered drug target. You will carry out novel research employing an mRNA-display-based peptide discovery platform, the RaPID system, to discover tools to modulate the production of this and other proteins during ribosomal translation. Your work will involve generation of ribosome-bound cotranslational folding intermediates, mRNA-display screening, cyclic peptide synthesis and optimisation, optimising these tools for cellular delivery, and applying these tools in a range of structural, biochemical and cellular assays. You will work closely with researchers at the Francis Crick Institute.