Baylor College of Medicine invites applications for an innovative and highly interdisciplinary Postdoctoral Associate position focused on decoding how infection leaves durable epigenetic and transcriptional scars that shape long term immunity, inflammation, and lung repair.
This position is ideal for scientists excited to combine single cell transcriptomics and chromatin accessibility, CRISPR based gene and epigenetic perturbation, and deeply phenotype human cohorts to define causal mechanisms driving post infectious and post tuberculosis lung disease.
Postdoctoral Associate will need to implement single cell transcriptomics and epigenomic (scRNA-seq and scATAC, CITE-seq, Perterb-Seq, Cut and Run) on samples collected from participants who have had sepsis, pneumonia, and tuberculosis. Functional/ mechanistic validation of regulatory elements and gene networks controlling inflammation, immune memory, and tissue repair will be implemented using CRISPR inhibition and activation (CRISPRi/a) in primary immune cells and lung organoids. They are expected to be the first author on high-impact manuscripts that can form the basis for K-level or equivalent fellowship applications, or transitions to faculty. The position is optimal for applicants wanting to a) link multi-omic patient results to mechanistic, causal biology; b) eager to integrate wet-lab experiments with advanced bioinformatic analysis; c) excited to work at the interface of human cohorts with robust epidemiologic and long-term outcomes with experimental systems; d) aim to transition to independent investigator roles in academia or industry.
Baylor College of Medicine is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action/Equal Access Employer.
Nature; PD; SN