Group: Liver-Brain Axis
Reporting to: Dr Anna Hadjihambi (PI)
Duration: up to 3 years (project ends December 2028)
Annual leave: 30 days per annum plus bank holidays
Pension: Minimum employer contribution 8% (increased with higher rate of personal contribution)
Hours: Full time, 36.5 hours per week
Start date: December 2025 (flexible)
The Liver-Brain Axis Group, led by Dr Anna Hadjihambi, a neuroscientist, at The Roger Williams Institute of Liver Studies, is seeking a highly motivated and experienced post-doctoral scientist with a strong background in Neuroscience/Neurobiology. Our team brings together neuroscientists and physiologists committed to interdisciplinary research that leverages expertise in the nervous system to better understand and develop novel treatments for brain dysfunction associated with liver disease. This position provides a unique opportunity to contribute to a cutting-edge translational project funded by the UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship.
The aim of this research is to advance our understanding of the abnormal physiological processes associated with metabolic dysfunction associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), focusing on the brain and cerebrovascular system. This project will investigate the hypothesis that reduced metabolic supply is responsible for the cognitive impairment and decreased quality of life reported in patients with MASLD and develops as a result of disease-induced autonomic dysfunction.
We aim to study whether MASLD associated changes in the brain’s blood vessels can be reversed by resolving liver disease, or if the cerebrovascular damage is irreversible, thus making the brain more fragile during ageing. This role provides a unique opportunity to engage in basic and translational science and combine state-of-the-art experimental animal in vivo methods and molecular biology techniques, to address clinically compelling questions.
The Roger Williams Institute of Liver Studies is a unique clinical academic partnership between the Foundation for Liver Research, King’s College London and King’s College Hospital that encompasses a multi-disciplinary team focussed on liver research and the improvement of outcomes for patients with liver diseases. This role would be employed by the Foundation for Liver Research, registered charity no. 1134579.
Role and remit
The successful candidate will be working closely with the faculty and with interdisciplinary national and international collaborators at the crossroads of physiology, hepatology, neuroscience and biomedical engineering. We are looking for an experienced researcher to contribute to this project by investigating the brain circuits or signalling pathways along the liver-brain axis, which lead to the reported MASLD associated brain alterations. Areas of interest for this position include, but are not limited to, stereotaxic microinjections of viral vectors, circuit tracing, chemogenetic manipulations, brain imaging combined with head-fixed behavioural protocols, as well as associated data analysis and interpretation.
Key responsibilities
Experience, skills and knowledge
Essential
Highly desirable
Advantages of working with us
Our core values:
We look forward to receiving your:
by email, via the 'Apply' button above, to Jenny Dines (E: j.dines@researchinliver.org.uk), Operations Manager, Foundation for Liver Research. We are happy to consider any reasonable adjustments that candidates may need during the recruitment process.
Please name documents you send as follows:
<surname, first name, RS72, {CV} or {covering letter}> Quote Job Ref: RS72
For further information about the Foundation for Liver Research and the Roger Williams Institute of Liver Studies, please visit our website. Questions regarding the position should be directed to Dr Anna Hadjihambi by email a.hadjichambi@researchinliver.org.uk.
Location: | London |
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Salary: | £45,031 to £49,871 (Starting salary) depending on experience |
Hours: | Full Time |
Contract Type: | Fixed-Term/Contract |
Placed On: | 21st August 2025 |
Closes: | 20th October 2025 |
Job Ref: | RS72 |
Type / Role:
Subject Area(s):
Location(s):
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