Positions Available

There is one job vacancy.

RESEARCH ASSISTANT PROFESSOR (REF: 2766) (SENIOR SYSTEMS BIOLOGIST)

A research scientist and group leader with developed skills in systems biology approaches is required to play a leading role in the initiation and progression of the research projects. The position will be based alongside the CoEPEB headquarters in UWA's new Molecular and Chemical Sciences building. The position will involve tight collaboration with CoEPEB researchers and close links to nearby computing centres such as the Western Australian Supercomputing Program based at UWA and the Centre for Comparative Genomics based at Murdoch University.

  • 2 year appointment
  • Salary range: Level B $74,132 - $88,033 p.a. Plus 17% superannuation
  • Closing date: Friday, 29 May 2009
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PhD, honours and summer vacation scholarships are available in the Centre, in association with the Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology. Please click on the links for particulars. Many potential projects are available, including, for example:

- the development of algorithms for the prediction of protein subcellular localization
- quantitative analysis of fluxes in metabolic networks
- the development of web-based tools for the analysis of quantitative proteomics data

We welcome students from a wide variety of backgrounds, whether biological (Biochemistry, Genetics) or computational (Computer Science, Physics, Mathematics). To discuss potential projects please contact Prof. Ian Small or
News
According to Time magazine:

Centre contributes to the second most important scientific discovery of 2009!

Centre contributes to the second most important scientific discovery of 2009

From the original Time article by EBEN HARRELL

The Top 10 of Everything for 2009

2. The Human Epigenome, Decoded

DNA

The decoding of the human genome nearly a decade ago fueled expectations that an understanding of all human hereditary influences was within sight. But the connections between genes and, say, disease turned out to be far more complicated than imagined. What has since emerged is a new frontier in the study of genetic signaling known as epigenetics, which holds that the behavior of genes can be modified by environmental influences and that those changes can be passed down through generations. So people who smoke cigarettes in their youth, for example, sustain certain epigenetic changes, which may then increase the risk that their children's children will reach puberty early. In October, a team led by Joseph Ecker at the Salk Institute in La Jolla, Calif., studied human skin and stem cells to produce the first detailed map of the human epigenome. By comparing this with the epigenomes of diseased cells, scientists will be able to work out how glitches in the epigenome may lead to cancers and other diseases. The study, which was published in the journal Nature, is a giant leap in geneticists' quest to better understand the strange witches' brew of nature and nurture that makes us who we are.


Nature Paper

Breaking News!

October 2009: After working on the Arabidopsis methylome Ryan Lister, Julian Tonti-Filippini and Harvey Millar have co-authored a Nature Paper about the the human methylome!
Read More...

An overview for the general reader can be found at the Economist

Software