Life Sciences PhD Genome Stability - Investigating DNA damage tolerance and repair responses on mitotic chromosomes in human cells (2024)

A PhD studentship (3.5 years) is available from September 2023 under the supervision of Dr Chris Kok-Lung Chan and Dr Antony Oliver (Genome Damage and Stability Centre) in the School of Life Sciences

What you get

This School-funded position covers Home (UK) tuition fees and a stipend at standard UKRI rates for 3.5 years. Applicants with overseas fee status need to provide evidence of how they will fund the difference between Home and International tuition fees (approx. £18k per year).

Type of award

Postgraduate Research

PhD project

We are seeking an enthusiastic and motivated PhD student to study the chromosome protection mechanism in human mitotic cells in an interdisciplinary project.

About The Project

DNA damage can occur in any phase of the cell cycle. Depending on the types of DNA lesion, chromatin environment and the cell cycle stage, cells employ different strategies to fix DNA lesions. Unrepaired and/or mis-repaired DNA molecules can accelerate genome instability, leading to genetic diseases and cancer development. Therefore, it is essential to repair DNA damage effectively and accurately to avoid daughter cells receiving incorrect genetic materials. Generally, Repairing DNA damage is relatively efficient on open, uncondensed chromatin. However, this poses a significant challenge to cells undergoing mitosis, as their DNA is tightly packed into highly condensed chromosomes. Thus, how mitotic cells can effectively repair DNA lesions in the context of compacted chromatin remains unknown.

The aims of this project are to understand the impact of DNA lesions on chromosome architecture and faithful chromosome segregation as well as the underlying mechanism of DNA damage responses in human mitotic cells. We also aim to apply the knowledge gained from this study to target cancer cells with high levels of mitotic DNA damage. The student will employ several cutting-edge technologies to study how human cells tolerate and repair DNA lesions during mitosis. The project will use genetically modified human cells as a model and combine advanced super-resolution imaging techniques and structural biology analysis. The student will learn a variety of research techniques including CRISPR genome editing, molecular biology, biochemistry, advanced fluorescent imaging, cytogenetics and cryoEM structural analysis.

The Team and Training

The student will be directly supervised from two senior research leaders at the Genome Centre. The successful PhD candidate will receive training from the two research teams with strong expertise in cell and chromosome biology, super-resolution imaging technology, cryo-electron microscopy and structural biology. We benefit from strong interactions with the Genome Centre, the Wolfson Centre of Biological Imaging, and Life Sciences. The student will also receive support to attend training workshops and scientific conferences provided by the host lab. We aim to nourish the next generation of scientists.

Informal enquiries about the project can be made to Dr. Chris Kok-Lung Chan at koklung.chan@sussex.ac.uk

Eligibility

Candidates should have (or expect) a minimum BSc 2:1. An MSc degree is advantageous. Qualification should be in Biochemistry, or related subject area. You may also be considered if you have other professional qualifications or experience of equivalent standing.

Candidates for whom English is not their first language must include a document listed here:  English language requirements

Applications are particularly welcomed from candidates with protected characteristics – e.g., from Black and other ethnic minorities – who are under-represented in postgraduate research at our institution.

Deadline

10 June 2024 23:45

How to apply

Please submit a formal application using the online admissions portal attaching a CV, degree transcripts and certificates, and two academic referees. A research proposal is not required. Instead, please upload a personal statement describing your subject areas of interest, skills and previous experience, motivation for Doctoral Research, future goals, and why you are applying to this project.

On the application system select Programme of Study – PhD Genome Damage and Stability. Please select ‘funding obtained’ and state the supervisor’s name where required.

Contact us

For queries about the application process, please see the online application guide or contact Emma Chorley: lifesci-rec@sussex.ac.uk

For enquiries about the project, please contact the supervisor: koklung.chan@sussex.ac.uk

For further information, please see: 

http://www.sussex.ac.uk/lifesci/chanlab/

https://profiles.sussex.ac.uk/p350627-kok-lung-chan

https://profiles.sussex.ac.uk/p265618-antony-oliver

Availability

At level(s):
PG (research)

Application deadline:
10 June 2024 23:45 (GMT)

Countries

The award is available to people from the following country: