A postdoctoral researcher position is available at the Liesz-Laboratory at the Institute for Stroke and Dementia Research, Munich. Our group investigates how sterile tissue injuries such as stroke or myocardial infarction shape systemic immunity, with a particular focus on maladaptive trained immunity and bone marrow epigenetic reprogramming. This work builds on our recent studies describing systemic immune activation after stroke (Immunity 2021), stroke-induced vascular inflammation and plaque destabilization (Nature 2024), and the newly identified phenomenon of central trained immunity as a driver of multimorbidity after sterile injury (Cell 2024). To expand this line of research, we are now recruiting Postdoctoral Researchers in Trained Immunity, Epigenetics or Computational Biology to join our multidisciplinary team. The position is embedded within a newly funded ERC Consolidator Grant, further supported by the SyNergy Cluster of Excellence and the newly established Collaborative Research Centre CRC 1744 “Compartmentalized Cellular Networks in Neurovascular Diseases.”
We welcome applications from candidates with expertise in either of two complementary profile tracks:
Profile Track 1 – Computational Epigenomics / Multi-Omics Data Integration
Candidates with a strong background in bioinformatics, computational biology or epigenomics. Desirable experience includes single-cell and spatial omics analysis (scRNA-seq, ATAC-seq, CUT&RUN, MERFISH, Visium), epigenomic data processing (chromatin accessibility, histone marks, enhancer mapping), multi-omics integration using Seurat, Signac, Harmony, ArchR or Scanpy, machine learning approaches for high-dimensional data, and programming skills in R or Python.
Profile Track 2 – Experimental Immunology / Bone Marrow Biology / Trained Immunity
Candidates with an experimental background in immunology, inflammation biology or bone marrow niche biology. Desirable experience includes myeloid cell biology, trained immunity, macrophage and HSPC biology, experience with murine models of inflammatory or ischemic injury (stroke, myocardial infarction), flow cytometry, cell sorting, epigenetic assays (ATAC-seq preparation, ChIP or CUT&RUN), functional assays such as cytokine multiplexing, metabolic profiling or immunohistochemistry, and experience with in vivo inter-organ communication models.
Our environment
As part of the SyNergy Cluster of Excellence, member of large collaborative research networks (including CRC 1744, FOR2879 ImmunoStroke and Helmholtz collaborations), and located in the Center for Stroke and Dementia Research, we provide a highly collaborative, interdisciplinary and internationally visible research environment with access to cutting-edge technologies in immunology, (spatial) multi-omics, advanced imaging and computational biology.