PROGRAMMER JOB - databases
This is a discussion on PROGRAMMER JOB - databases ; Dear all We have a job opening for a programmer in our lab. The details will be available on the Edinburgh university website soon, but to register your interest, please email me jimicarlo@gmail.com , with PROGRAMMER JOB in the title ...
![]() |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
| |||
| |||
| We have a job opening for a programmer in our lab. The details will be available on the Edinburgh university website soon, but to register your interest, please email me jimicarlo@gmail.com, with PROGRAMMER JOB in the title and I'll alert you when it goes online. Here's a brief description... Opening for a computer scientist to help solving one of the fundamental problems of Cell Biology: the elucidation of protein- protein interactions Wellcome Trust Centre for Cell Biology, University of Edinburgh, UK Ideal professional background: Database administration (PostgreSQL), database application development, algorithms, data structure, Java (C++, web programming), data mining, data visualization. Ideal personal attributes: Interested in application (of informatics to proteomics/life sciences), inspired by wider scope of things, awake, asking questions. Our group: We are a young group of currently seven people from Germany, UK, Denmark, Brazil, and China. The group has started five years ago in Milan, Italy, and relocated about two years ago to Edinburgh. We are embedded in one of the best Cell Biology Institutes of the UK interacting with some of the world's best researchers in Cell Biology. Our own work focuses on acquiring data of proteins by mass spectrometry and on designing computational tools to mine this data for valuable information. Our aim: We want to find out which proteins do interact in the cell. There are many thousand proteins in a human cell, most having their own distinct function. However, proteins usually act in complexes. Protein complexes can be isolated and their protein components be investigated by mass spectrometry. The analysis does reveal the identity of the proteins in the complex but not which proteins interact directly. This information is currently not accessible at all or only for a very limited number of complexes. We are therefore developing a new approach that will deliver this information. Our approach: We chemically link proteins in complexes and preserve in this way their proximity for the mass spectrometric analysis. The proteins are then degraded in a controlled way into peptides. A few of the peptides are actually a pair of peptides stably linked to one an other by the chemical linker and thus containing the information we desire. These cross-linked peptides are at the centre of our interest. We detect them together with all the other peptide by mass spectrometry and then need to identify them. We do so by matching all spectra to a database containing all possible peptide combinations. In this way we find the peptide pair that matches best to our mass spectrometric data. The approach is computationally very challenging: 1000 proteins give easily rise to 1,000,000 peptides and hence to 5x1011 peptide pairs. A person in our lab has been working since 14 months on this computational problem and the open post is to reinforce these efforts. Our requirements: Any candidate applying for this position should be knowledgeable about the techniques needed for the design of efficient algorithms and be able to use appropriate mathematical tools for analysing their performance. Moreover he/she should understand the importance of the data structures used in a particular implementation of an algorithm, and how the data structure that is used can affect the running time. Desirable skills include: knowledge of Java, databases (PostgreSQL) and web-based programming. Our offer: Desired start date ASAP. Funding is secured until 30.04.2009. The salary depends on the experience level (20-30,000 GBP/year) and is fixed by the European Commission who is the source of funding. In addition, travel allowance is paid according to the rules of the European Commission (up to 4,000 GBP/year). Our website: http://rappsilber.bio.ed.ac.uk/ Good luck! We look forward to hearing from you. Jimi |
|
#2
| |||
| |||
|
On Feb 11, 11:51*am, jimicarlo > Dear all > > We have SPAMMED an ORACLE newsgroup unnecessarily, looking for a PostgreSQL administrator. Is your comprehension of the English language that poor? > > Jimi Could you NOT find a PostgreSQL newsgroup to spam instead? Or did you think littering every major database newsgroup in existence would cover that situation? If this is the way you proceed to search for 'qualified' candidates I expect you won't find any, at least not in the near future. Remove this SPAM from comp.databases.oracle.misc immediately and apologise to the group for violating the charter: http://members.cox.net/oracleunix/ORACLECH.HTM David Fitzjarrell |
![]() |
« Previous Thread
|
Next Thread »
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
| |
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:47 PM.




Linear Mode