The Department of Immunology maintains research programs that focus on translational and basic research in areas relevant to human disease. Our goal is to become a world-class center for the study of inflammation and the targeted development of novel therapeutics for both treatment and prevention of immune-mediated diseases. We are seeking a Research Technician to support studies in T-cell immunology and autoimmunity. The lab focuses on (i) generating and stabilizing regulatory T (Treg) cells from effector CD4⁺ T cells, (ii) dissecting epigenetic and metabolic pathways that govern Treg lineage stability and fitness (e.g., OXPHOS/heme biosynthesis), and (iii) testing antigen-specific Treg therapies in mouse models of multiple sclerosis (EAE).The position involves primary T-cell isolation and culture, differentiation assays (e.g., Treg/Th17), viral transduction and CRISPR/Cas9 perturbations, multi-color flow cytometry, mouse colony support and EAE studies (induction, clinical scoring, and tissue processing), and standard molecular biology (qPCR, cloning, Western blotting). The technician will keep accurate records, perform basic analyses (FlowJo, GraphPad Prism; optional R/Python), and help maintain lab operations and regulatory compliance. This role offers substantial hands-on training, authorship opportunities commensurate with contribution, and growth toward increasing independence. A two-year commitment is preferred.
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Job Type
Full-time
Career Level
Entry Level
Number of Employees
5,001-10,000 employees