Job Descrption
Key Information
Salary: Dependent on relevant Postdoctoral experience. Future progression is based on annual performance review. If the candidate has not yet been awarded their PhD, the starting salary will be at £35,844 until the successful completion of their viva.
This role is eligible for ICR Sponsorship, subject to eligibility. Support will be provided for costs associated with Visa application. If you are considering relocating to the UK, further information can be found here.
Duration of Contract: Fixed Term until July 2026
Hours per week: 35 hours per week (Full Time)
Closing Date: 23rd October 2024
Job Details
Under the leadership of Erik Wennerberg, we are seeking to appoint a Postdoctoral Training Fellow to join the Radiation-enhanced Immunotherapy Group to study how radiotherapy alters the tumour microenvironment in solid cancers, characterize radiation-induced immune checkpoints, focusing on perturbations of immunometabolic pathways, with the goal of developing... treatment strategies that optimize the immunogenicity of radiotherapy-immunotherapy combinations.
General information on Post Doc's at The ICR can be found here.
Key Requirements
The successful candidate must have a PhD in Biological Sciences (or equivalent) and have knowledge of cancer biology and tumour immunology. Expertise in cancer metabolism is desirable but not essential. They need to be able to work independently while having excellent communication/collaboration skills to operate in a multidisciplinary research environment.
The ICR has a workforce agreement stating that Postdoctoral Training Fellows can only be employed for up to 7 years as PDTF at the ICR, providing total postdoctoral experience (including previous employment at this level elsewhere) does not exceed 10 years
Department/Directorate Information:
The Radiation-enhanced Immunotherapy Group is newly established at the ICR and we are dedicated to understanding how metabolic reprogramming contributes to immune resistance in developing tumours and how this process is affected by cancer therapy. Our goal is to identify and characterise therapy-induced immune checkpoints that we can target to optimise radiotherapy-immunotherapy treatments for patients with lung cancer and other solid tumours.
https://www.icr.ac.uk/our-research/research-divisions/radiotherapy-and-imaging/radiation-enhanced-immunotherapy
We are based in a dynamic and diverse research environment in the Division of Radiotherapy and Imaging in Sutton.
https://www.icr.ac.uk/our-research/research-divisions/radiotherapy-and-imaging
We are part of the wider Centre for Translational Immunotherapy (CTI), which brings together multidisciplinary immunology researchers across the ICR and the Royal Marsden Hospital.
Further, we are connected to a wide network of national and international collaborators, including our close collaborators at Albert Einstein School of Medicine, New York. Our lab has an active public engagement programme that is central to our research approach and an inspiring training environment for early career scientists including tailored courses to support scientific, personal, and wider career development.
We encourage all applicants to access the job pack attached for more detailed information regarding this role. For an informal discussion regarding the role, please contact Erik Wennerberg via Email on erik.wennerberg@icr.ac.uk
About The Institute of Cancer Research
Why work for us?
As a member of staff, you'll have exclusive access to a range of staff benefits.
The ICR is committed to supporting overseas applicants applying for roles, please click here to find out further information.
The Institute of Cancer Research, London, is one of the world's most influential cancer research institutes, with an outstanding record of achievement dating back more than 100 years. Further information about working at the ICR can be found here.
We look forward to receiving applications from all candidates, wherever in the world they are currently based. We will select those who display the potential to become, or to support, the world leading cancer researchers of the future based on their application and performance at interview. However, we particularly welcome British applicants from black and ethnic minority backgrounds, as they are under-represented within the ICR and nationwide in STEM roles
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