Postdoctoral researcher in biophysics on virus self-assembly (M/F)

Laboratoire de Physique des Solides

ORSAY • Essonne

  • Researcher in FTC
  • 24 mounth
  • Doctorate

This offer is available in English version

This offer is open to people with a document recognizing their status as a disabled worker.

Offer at a glance

The Unit

Laboratoire de Physique des Solides

Contract Type

Researcher in FTC

Working hHours

Full Time

Workplace

91405 ORSAY

Contract Duration

24 mounth

Date of Hire

01/09/2026

Remuneration

From €3,131.32 to €4,526.02 gross per month based on experience

Apply Application Deadline : 15 June 2026 00:00

Job Description

Missions

Mimicking the intracellular milieu to understand virus self-assembly

Activity

Most viruses have as their genome – not double-standed (ds)DNA, as is the case with all other evolving organisms, but rather – single-stranded (ss)RNA. Further, because ssRNA is much more compact and compressible than dsDNA, it is possible to make ssRNA-genome virus particles from their purified components, ssRNA and capsid protein, by simply mixing these components in physiological buffer solution. Each infectious particle consists of a single RNA molecule inside a shell comprised of hundreds of copies of the capsid protein. These remarkable facts have facilitated a large number of experimental and theoretical investigations of the underlying co-assembly process – the self-assembly of perfectly-ordered/icosahedrally-symmetric nucleocapsids. And it is widely believed that this “test-tube”/in vitro phenomenon mimics the formation of a new generation of virus particles in their host cell, following the replication of their ssRNA genome and the synthesis of a hundreds-of-times-larger number of capsid proteins. But, in fact, there is to date essentially no experimental or theoretical program that sets out to bridge the gap between the knowledge bases acquired from in vitro studies of virus self-assembly on the one hand and intracellular viral replication on the other. In the present project, we propose a first set of systematic steps towards connecting these two sets of phenomena.

In particular, we argue that the difference between in vitro and intracellular (cytoplasmic) self-assembly of virus particles from their RNA and capsid protein is twofold: (1) in cytoplasm these basic components are embedded in a concentrated solution of proteins and nucleic acids that is highly viscous and whose osmotic effects alter the conformations of and interactions between the viral RNA and capsid proteins; and (2) in the cellular context, the capsid proteins are being actively synthesized, i.e., through ATP consumption, by the ribosomal machinery so that a nearly-constant influx of capsid proteins drives the virus self-assembly process towards a nonequilibrium state. To connect the in vitro and cellular contexts, we propose to extend our earlier measurements of virus self-assembly from purified RNA and capsid protein components by carrying these reactions in the controlled presence of calibrated osmolytes and by synthesizing capsid protein in cytoplasmic extracts where messenger (m)RNA is translated into capsid protein which in turn packages it into nucleocapsids. These processes will be investigated and quantified by a mix of state-of-the-art: experimental techniques including solid-state NMR, time-resolved synchrotron X-ray scattering, cryotransmission electron and super-resolution fluorescence microscopies; and analytical theory and coarse-grained computer simulations.

All of this work will be carried out for a mammalian virus – Hepatitis B virus (HBV), which has a DNA genome but whose genetic information is packaged in the cytoplasm in mRNA form well characterized by in vitro studies – in order to provide for the first time a general foundation for and understanding of virus self-assembly in cellular environment.

Your Profil

Skills

Applications from candidates with a PhD in biological physics, physical chemistry, or structural biology are welcome.

Your Work Environment

This international research project is conducted in collaboration with the Institute of Molecular Microbiology and Structural Biochemistry (Lyon, France), the Montpellier Institute for Research in Infectiology (Montpellier, France), the University of California, Los Angeles (Los Angeles, CA), and the University of California, Riverside (Riverside, CA). It is funded by the ANR (French National Research Agency) in France and the NSF (National Science Foundation) in the United States until the end of 2028.

Compensation and benefits

Compensation

From €3,131.32 to €4,526.02 gross per month based on experience

Annual leave and RTT

44 jours

Remote Working practice and compensation

Pratique et indemnisation du TT

Transport

Prise en charge à 75% du coût et forfait mobilité durable jusqu’à 300€

About the offer

Offer reference UMR8502-GUITRE-004
CN Section(s) / Research Area Molecular and structural biology, biochemistry

About the CNRS

The CNRS is a major player in fundamental research on a global scale. The CNRS is the only French organization active in all scientific fields. Its unique position as a multi-specialist allows it to bring together different disciplines to address the most important challenges of the contemporary world, in connection with the actors of change.

CNRS

The research professions

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Postdoctoral researcher in biophysics on virus self-assembly (M/F)

Researcher in FTC • 24 mounth • Doctorate • ORSAY

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