Career & jobs for students
Offers for students during and after their studies

Offers for students during and after their studies
RNA Binding Proteins & Iron Metabolism Diseases
A PhD position is available in Barcelona starting October–November 2025, focused on RNA Binding Proteins and Iron Metabolism Diseases. The position is particularly suitable for LMU Munich Molecular and Cellular Biology Master's students who started in 2023 and are completing their degree in 2025.
Funding will be applied for via a fellowship in April 2025, with additional support available for international research stays, including at EMBL Heidelberg.
To apply, send an email to Prof. Dr. Mayka Sanchez with the subject line "Predoc position 2025-MS-03", including:
Prof. Dr. Mayka Sanchez
Professor Titular Agregada and Principal Investigator
Department of Biomedical Sciences
Universitat Internacional de Catalunya
Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
Group Website
MSc thesis in Comparative Quantitative Morphology and Computational Developmental Biology
The research group of Prof. Dr. Kay Schneitz (Technical University of Munich, TUM School of Life Sciences, Plant Developmental Biology)
Prof. Dr. Kay Schneitz is looking for a highly motivated young scientist interested in cell biology
and/or plant systematics with a strong affinity for comparative morphometry and
plant evo-devo as well as for interdisciplinary work at the interface of bioinformatics,
advanced confocal microscopy, image processing, 3D computer visualization,
modeling and cell and developmental genetics.
More information here
Contact: Kay Schneitz
Kay Schneitz
TUM Plant Developmental Biology
Masto: @kay@biologists.social
Bluesky: @kschneitz.bsky.social
Evolutionary Animal Ecology, University of Bayreuth (Germany) offers a PhD-postion on Parental Care and Microbial Control in Burying Beetles
We are seeking a highly motivated PhD candidate (f/m/d) to investigate how parental care enables Nicrophorus burying beetles to control beneficial and harmful microbial communities during family life. This three-year position is part of an ERC-funded project exploring the socioecology of animal-microbe interactions, focusing on how interactions between animals and microbes shape - and are shaped by - animal social behaviors.
The Challenge. Animals continuously interact with a vast array of harmful and beneficial microbes, and natural selection has shaped sophisticated strategies enabling them to manipulate these interactions. However, we still know little about the role of animal social behaviors in exerting such host control. Burying beetles are ideally suited to tackle this issue, because they show complex social behaviors (parental care) and intimately interact with both beneficial symbionts and harmful environmental microbes during their social (family) life. In this project, we will examine how different parental care strategies (i) enable beetles to mitigate the threat posed by harmful microbes, (ii) affect the transmission of beneficial symbionts to offspring, and (iii) vary across beetle species in their fitness effects and role in host control. The interdisciplinary project will involve an exciting combination of behavioral observations, laboratory and field experiments, as well as the profiling of microbial communities via metabarcoding.
Your Profile. We are looking for a highly motivated candidate with:
What We Offer.
How to Apply. Applications should include:
Apply by May 16, 2025, by sending your application as a single PDF to Jos.Kramer@uni-bayreuth.de with the subject: "PhD Application - Parental Care vs. Microbes". The ideal starting date is September 2025. The University of Bayreuth is committed to promoting diversity and equal opportunities. We encourage applications from all qualified individuals, regardless of background. The working language in our group is English.
For more information, feel free to reach out informally: Jos Kramer