Fully funded positions are available for PhD students in the lab of Prof. Rustem Ismagilov at the University of Chicago, in the Biophysical Sciences or Chemistry graduate programs. We use microfluidics to understand complex systems, and develop tools for research and medicine. Recent projects include 1) development of “chemistrode”, a microfluidic device for to deliver, record, and analyze chemical information from cells and tissues; 2) understanding general principles that govern biological dynamics in space and time; 3) using chemistrode and other microfluidic tools to understand biological dynamics and signaling in vivo and in culture; 4) synthetic biology to construct microbial communities; 5) developing technologies for control of crystallization and aggregation of proteins in nanoliter volumes; 6) determining the mechanisms that maintain robustness of early patterning of the Drosophila embryo; 7) understanding how in blood coagulation simple dynamics arises from complexity; and 8) developing new catalysts using genetic algorithms. See http://ismagilovlab.uchicago.edu/publications.html for details. Interests of current lab members span microfluidics, analytical chemistry, organic and physical chemistry, catalysis, biophysics, biochemistry, single-molecule microscopy, microbiology, developmental biology, Alzheimer’s, diabetes, and immunology.
We welcome candidates from all disciplines, including chemistry, biology, engineering, or physics. Interested applicants should apply to the University of Chicago Chemistry graduate program (http://chemistry.uchicago.edu/phdapp.shtml) or University of Chicago Biophysical Sciences graduate program (http://biophysics.uchicago.edu/students/application.html) and mention the Ismagilov group on the application. Contact [log in to unmask] with questions.
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