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PhD student in structural biology - M/F - CNRS

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

Date Limite Candidature : mercredi 9 juillet 2025 23:59:00 heure de Paris

Assurez-vous que votre profil candidat soit correctement renseigné avant de postuler

Informations générales

Intitulé de l'offre : PhD student in structural biology - M/F - CNRS (H/F)
Référence : UMR5075-CYNDAV-073
Nombre de Postes : 1
Lieu de travail : GRENOBLE
Date de publication : mercredi 18 juin 2025
Type de contrat : CDD Doctorant
Durée du contrat : 36 mois
Date de début de la thèse : 1 octobre 2025
Quotité de travail : Complet
Rémunération : 2200 gross monthly
Section(s) CN : 01 - Interactions, particules, noyaux du laboratoire au cosmos

Description du sujet de thèse

Structural characterization of enzyme complexes involved in glycosaminoglycan biosynthesis using single-particle cryo-electron microscopy.

Contexte de travail

Located on the Grenoble Science Park (ESRF/ILL/EMBL/IBS), the Institute of Structural Biology (IBS) is a national and international player in the field of integrated structural biology. The IBS is a research center, a technical platform, a host site and a scientific training center. Its mission is to develop research in structural biology, a field of research that is crucial to the understanding of fundamental biological mechanisms. It is supported by 12 state-of-the-art platforms.
As a joint research unit (CEA-CNRS-UGA), the IBS is composed of 20 research groups, each of which proposes a multi-disciplinary approach, at the frontiers of biology, physics and chemistry, in coherence with 3 research axes. Nearly 320 people work there as researchers, PhD students, engineers and technicians in a multicultural and international environment.
The person recruited will join the team of Rebekka Wild in the 'Structure and Activity of Glycosaminoglycans' (SAGAG) group. The team is interested in understanding the molecular mechanisms of enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of glycosaminoglycans (GAGs). GAGs are long chains of highly complex polysaccharides found on the cell surface, and their biosynthesis involves more than a dozen membrane-bound enzymes localized in the Golgi apparatus. Our team combines in vitro biochemical analyses with structural biology approaches, in particular single-particle cryo-EM, to study the molecular mechanisms of GAG biosynthesis enzymes and their assembly into macromolecular complexes.

Contraintes et risques

Protein expression will be carried out in a laboratory with biosafety level 2.

The research will be carried out in either French or English, however it is expected that the non-French speaking candidate will strive to learn the basics of French in order to facilitate communication and integration into the laboratory.