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We have 30 virulence PhD Projects, Programmes & Scholarships for Non-European Students

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virulence PhD Projects, Programmes & Scholarships for Non-European Students

We have 30 virulence PhD Projects, Programmes & Scholarships for Non-European Students

Regulation of virulence and biofilm formation by quorum sensing and the "stress alarmone" ppGpp in gram-negative pathogenic bacteria.

We are investigating the complex interplay between cell-cell signalling (quorum sensing), microbial lifestyle (i.e., free-living planktonic cultures vs sessile biofilm communities), growth phase and virulence in gram-negative bacteria. Read more

The Evolution of Pathogen-Host Interactions in Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica serovar Blackisle and the Harbour Porpoise (Phocoena phocoena)

Funding. This PhD project is part of a competition funded by SRUC. This opportunity is open to UK and International students and provides funding to cover tuition fees at the UK rate, plus a stipend to support living costs. Read more
Last chance to apply

EASTBIO-Peptide-based precision anti-infectives for prophylaxis and treatment of foodborne listeriosis

  Research Group: Centre for Inflammation Research
Listeriosis is a life-threatening food-borne infection caused by the facultative intracellular pathogen Listeria monocytogenes. Clinical manifestations are severe and include meningoencephalitis, bacteremia, stillbirth and neonatal sepsis. Read more

China Scholarship Council: Role and mechanism of the bacterial Type VI secretion system

Many species of bacteria use a contractile nanomachine known as the Type VI secretion system (T6SS) to deliver a wide range of toxic proteins, known as ‘effectors’, directly into neighbouring cells. Read more
Last chance to apply

EastBio: Understanding how chromatin controls antigenic variation in Trypanosoma brucei

  Research Group: Institute of Cell Biology
Trypanosoma brucei is the etiological agent of trypanosomiasis in humans and animals and remains a significant, neglected tropical disease. Read more
Last chance to apply

EastBio: New Machine-Learning approaches for modelling protein-RNA interaction dynamics in bacteria.

  Research Group: Institute of Quantitative Biology, Biochemistry and Biotechnology
To survive in hostile environments, cells must swiftly adapt their transcriptome to counteract stresses. Read more

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