| Location: | London |
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| Salary: | £49,017 to £52,922 per annum |
| Hours: | Full Time |
| Contract Type: | Fixed-Term/Contract |
| Placed On: | 21st May 2026 |
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| Closes: | 17th June 2026 |
| Job Ref: | MED05802 |
About the role:
Applications are invited for a 3‑year postdoctoral research position to work within the Host–Microbe Co–Metabolism group at the MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences (LMS)/Institute of Clinical Sciences, in close collaboration with partners at Imperial College London. The microbiome plays a pivotal role in shaping host physiology, with emerging evidence linking microbial communities and their metabolites to cancer initiation, progression, and therapy response. Microbiota‑derived signals can influence key pathways involved in inflammation, metabolism, immune modulation, and cellular proliferation, yet the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. The successful candidate will employ molecular and quantitative approaches, using conventionally raised and germ‑free mouse models, to dissect how microbial composition, function, and metabolite production shape tumour initiation, progression, and therapeutic response. For more information, please visit https://www.cabreirolab.org or contact (fcabrei@ic.ac.uk).
What you would be doing:
The successful candidate will use state‑of‑the‑art mouse models (including germ‑free and gnotobiotic systems), in combination with genome engineering, microbiology, and multi‑omics profiling, to uncover microbiome–host interactions that drive cancer‑relevant phenotypes. You will design and implement mechanistic studies to define how specific microbial communities and metabolites modulate host pathways controlling tumour growth, therapy response, and microenvironmental cues. Working closely with wet‑lab scientists, bioinformaticians, and clinicians, you will integrate quantitative phenotyping, bulk and single‑cell profiling, and microbial manipulation to reveal conserved principles of host–microbe co‑metabolism in cancer biology. You will also be encouraged to contribute to related projects within the Host–Microbe Co‑Metabolism group and to help shape new research directions at the interface of microbiome research, cancer biology, and systems biology.
What we are looking for:
What we can offer you:
Further Information
This is a full-time, fixed-term post for 3 years.
For further information about this role, please contact Filipe Cabreiro (f.cabreiro@lms.mrc.ac.uk).
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