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Research Assistant 2
Department OverviewThe Research Assistant 2 (RA2) will work together with Research Associates fellows to screen drugs and genes that are capable of controlling immune response in the nematode C. elegans. The RA2 will also perform behavioral assays in C. elegans under the supervision of Research Associates. The RA2 is also expected to perform a small drug screen independently. These studies are relatively sophisticated and require both independent and ample laboratory skills. More specifically, our laboratory and other laboratories have identified several genetic pathways that regulate the expression of C. elegans genes that are markers of the immune response. We and others have constructed a number of transgenic animals expressi
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