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Portal > Offres > Offre UMR5297-MELDES0-251 - Chercheur en neurosciences "Etude des voies d'endocytose spécifiques des différents types de récepteurs beta adrénergiques dans les neurones d'hippocampe" H/F

Neuroscience researcher “Study of endocytosis pathways specific to different types of beta adrenergic receptors in hippocampal neurons” M/F

This offer is available in the following languages:
- Français-- Anglais

Application Deadline : 29 April 2025 23:59:00 Paris time

Ensure that your candidate profile is correct before applying.

General information

Offer title : Neuroscience researcher “Study of endocytosis pathways specific to different types of beta adrenergic receptors in hippocampal neurons” M/F (H/F)
Reference : UMR5297-MELDES0-251
Number of position : 1
Workplace : BORDEAUX
Date of publication : 08 April 2025
Type of Contract : Researcher in FTC
Contract Period : 7 months
Expected date of employment : 15 July 2025
Proportion of work : Full Time
Remuneration : From €2991.58 to €3,417.33 gross per month depending on experience
Desired level of education : Doctorate
Experience required : Indifferent
Section(s) CN : 25 - Molecular and cellular neurobiology, neurophysiology

Missions

The aim is to define the specific endocytosis pathways of different types of beta-adrenergic receptors in hippocampal neurons. To this end, the candidate will use fluorescence imaging techniques on live and fixed cultured neurons, immunofluorescence, enzyme activity assays and proteomic analysis.

Activities

Neuronal culture and transfection (transgenic mice), high-resolution live-cell imaging, image analysis. Internal report writing and publication in scientific journals.

Skills

Work in a biology research laboratory, cell culture, molecular biology, teamwork, writing in scientific English.

Work Context

Established in 2011, IINS brings together 180 scientists from different nationalities and backgrounds (chemistry, structural biology, molecular and cell biology, biophysics, clinical medicine, advanced imaging, neurobiology) to understand brain function in healthy and pathological states. IINS conducts multidisciplinary research at the cutting edge of synapse biology and neural systems physiology, with a particular focus on the development of new technologies and tools.

Constraints and risks

Possibility of working shifts