Dr. Shin is seeking a PhD post-doctoral fellow for the project, which is VA merit grant funded, entitled “Role of ATRX, a chromatin remodeler, in immunotherapy response.” This project aims to study the role of ATRX which is SWI/SNF-like ATP dependent chromatin remodeler, has various role in human cancer development and well-studied in the field of glioma. The current project is interrogating the role of ATRX in immunotherapy response using murine and cell line models that includes genetically engineered lung cancer model. Cell line model demonstrated accelerated tumor growth upon immunotherapy when cancer cell lost ATRX expression. Therefore, the study has potential to contribute to new biological insight on epigenetic mechanisms of resistance and develop new therapeutic strategy. Postdoctoral Associate will have opportunity to work on other projects that includes CAR T cell therapy for lung cancer and other upcoming preclinical studies assessing combination immunotherapies which may lead into early clinical trials for patients with lung cancer, head & neck cancer and melanoma.
Baylor College of Medicine typically follows similar to the NIH stipulated stipend guidelines for Postdoctoral Associates.
Baylor College of Medicine is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action/Equal Access Employer.
Nature; PD; SN