We are looking for an experienced NMR spectroscopist to participate in our study of the human kinome. This Senior Scientist position is part of the Blue Sky Initiative “Seeing the Invisible in Protein Kinases” at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, TN. The World’s Brightest Minds Always Innovate At St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, we know what can be achieved when the brightest scientific minds face the fewest barriers. That’s why we provide world-class facilities. State-of-the-art technologies. Extraordinary support. And a collaborative, bench-to-bedside environment where you can see, firsthand, how your science translates into survival for the children we serve. Quite simply, at St. Jude, we encourage you to dream big and stop at nothing when it comes to finding cures and saving children. As a member of the NMR spectroscopy team, the candidate will study large and dynamic protein kinases and oligomers by solution NMR spectroscopy. The candidate will work to elucidate functional and mechanistic determinants of protein kinase activity by both NMR and a vast array of biophysical and biochemical methodologies. The candidate will work in a fast-paced multidisciplinary environment closely interacting with the biochemists, cell biologists, and computational chemists to interpret the results, formulate hypothesis, design and coordinate sample preparation and workflow. The unparalleled NMR center at St. Jude includes three 600 MHz, two 700 MHz, four 800 MHz, 850 MHz, and 1.1 GHz. The research activity will be supported by Blue Sky Initiative. The Blue Sky Initiative “ Seeing the Invisible in Protein Kinases ” is an inter-disciplinary project in the Department of Structural Biology and is supported by US $50 million in institutional funding. This large-scale project leverages ultra-high field nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), complemented with cryoEM, X-ray crystallography, data-science and computational approaches, to characterize the conformational landscape of the human kinome. Knowledge of the conformations of kinases is then used to understand the structural and functional consequences of disease-associated mutations and identify novel therapeutic opportunities.
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Job Type
Full-time
Career Level
Mid Level
Number of Employees
5,001-10,000 employees