Postdoctoral Fellow - Müschen Laboratory

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Research
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10000504 Requisition #
Thanks for your interest in the Postdoctoral Fellow - Müschen Laboratory position. Unfortunately this position has been closed but you can search our 0 open jobs by clicking here.
Basic education, experience and skills required for consideration:
  • PhD in cell or molecular biology,
  • Enthusiasm for science, willingness to think beyond established concepts and to try and learn new experimental and analysis tools. The lab takes a team science approach, so being a nice person and a good team player is important as well.
 
Additional Information:
  • Please send, in a single PDF, your curriculum vitae and a brief motivation statement to mmuschen@coh.org.
  • Recent work of the laboratory: Studying more than 800 patients, our group discovered a new subtype of leukemia (~15%) that can be treated with small molecule antagonists of pre-B cell receptor signaling, a new therapeutic concept that is now being tested in a clinical trial (Cancer Cell 2015). In addition, a recent study from our lab provided a mechanistic explanation for clonal evolution of normal B-cells towards leukemia (Nature Immunology 2016). Our group discovered that B-cell tumors are subject to a unique autoimmunity checkpoint for removal of self-reactive B-cells. Targeted hyperactivation of SYK (Nature 2015), PI3K (Nature Medicine 2016) and ERK (Cancer Cell 2015) in B-cell malignancies represents the functional equivalent of an autoimmunity checkpoint (AIC) to prevent B-cell autoimmunity. AIC-activation is achievable by pharmacological hyperactivation of SYK, PI3K and ERK, thereby leveraging mechanisms of negative selection in the immune system for targeted cancer therapy (Nature Rev Cancer 2018). Most recently, the Müschen laboratory discovered that B-lymphoid transcription factors serve a novel gatekeeper-function by limiting energy-supply to levels that are insufficient to fuel oncogenic transformation (Nature 2017). The full range of metabolic gatekeeper functions of B-cell transcription factors, including their ability to suppress the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP) in B-cell malignancies was revealed in a follow-up study (Cell 2018).
 
City of Hope is committed to creating a diverse environment and is proud to be an equal opportunity employer.  All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, religion, color, national origin, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, age, status as a protected veteran, or status as a qualified individual with disability.

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