The Xavier Lab is seeking a Research Technician to contribute to studies of the gut microbiome and its role in human health and disease. Current projects investigate the ecological and functional properties of intestinal microbial communities, mechanisms governing host–microbe interactions, and the development of experimental approaches to understand how commensal bacteria influence inflammation, metabolism, and colonization resistance. Recent work from the lab has linked gut microbial metabolism to cholesterol and cardiovascular disease risk in the Framingham Heart Study (PMID: 38569543), revealed how microbiota-driven immune responses shape intestinal biology (PMID: 39567686), and identified microbial communities that suppress pathogenic Enterobacteriaceae colonization (PMID: 39294375). These studies combine microbial cultivation, genomics, and host biology to understand mechanisms underlying human disease. The ideal candidate will have a strong interest in hands-on microbiology and microbiome research, particularly the cultivation and characterization of anaerobic gut bacteria. The candidate should be self-motivated, detail-oriented, and capable of troubleshooting experimental challenges independently. This position provides training in microbiology, microbial ecology, anaerobic culturing, next-generation sequencing, and host–microbe interaction research. The successful candidate will have opportunities to contribute intellectually to projects, present findings at lab meetings, and participate in manuscript preparation.
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Job Type
Full-time
Career Level
Mid Level