International PhD ProgrammeResearch Topics
Software Development and Bioinformatics (incl. Text Mining, Semantic Web, Machine Learning, Statistics)
Cell Biology and Biophysics
Ellenberg Group - Systems biology of cell division and nuclear organisation
Ries Group - Cellular Nanoscopy
Schwab Team - Volume correlative light and electron microscopy
Developmental Biology
Peri Group - Microglia: the guardians of the developing brain
Directors' Research
Hentze Group - Cytoplasmic gene regulation and molecular medicine
Genome Biology
Huber Group - Computational biology and genomics
Korbel Group - Origin and function of genetic variation
Steinmetz Group - Systems genetics
Structural and Computational Biology
Beck Group - Structure and function of large macromolecular assemblies
Bork Group - Deciphering function and evolution of biological systems
Briggs Group - Enveloped viruses and coated vesicles – cryo-electron microscopy and tomography
Gibson Team - Biological sequence analysis
Patil Group - Architecture and regulation of metabolic networks
Schneider (Reinhard) Team - Data integration and knowledge management
EMBL Hamburg
Lamzin Group - Integrative modelling for structural biology
Svergun Group - Small-angle X-ray scattering from macromolecular solutions
EBI Hinxton
Apweiler Team - Protein, cheminformatics and metabolism data
Beltrao Group - Evolution of cellular networks
Bertone Group - Pluripotency, reprogramming and differentiation
Birney Team - Nucleotide and genome data
Brazma Group - Functional genomics
Enright Group - Functional genomics and analysis of small RNA function
Flicek Team - Vertebrate genomics
Goldman Group - Evolutionary tools for genomic analysis
Marioni Group - Computational and evolutionary genomics
Overington Group - ChEMBL: a database of bioactive drug-like small molecules
Saez-Rodriguez Group - Systems biomedicine
Stegle Group - Computational genomics and systems genetics (from October 2012)
Steinbeck Team - Cheminformatics and metabolism
Thornton Group - Computational biology of proteins: structure, function and evolution
