The UMCG website shows YouTube videos. YouTube places cookies if you watch them. Choose ‘Rather not’ if you do not want these cookies. We also place cookies of our own. These help us improve the usability of our website.
More on our cookie policy.
Closing date: April 9
The position will require a highly motivated experienced bioinformatician or computational biologist to provide support for a variety of projects that build on innovative omics methods. The candidate will be responsible for applying longitudinal models to investigate the gut microbiome and metabolomics in infants and mothers starting from pregnancy until the first year of life. Annotation of taxonomy and metabolic pathways have already been applied on a subset of the cohort (~700 mother-infant pairs). The candidate will be responsible for the deeper investigation of the bacterial strains, bacterial genes, and evolutionary dynamics of the gut microbiome development in infants and will link the gut virome and microbiome composition to environmental and host factors. Ability/interest in developing new tools for longitudinal microbiome data analysis will be an advantage. This work will be done together with two other postdocs and five PhD students, working on shared topics.
The University Medical Centre Groningen (UMCG), located in the centre of Groningen, is one of the Netherlands’ eight university medical centres. The microbiome group includes colleagues from the department of Genetics, Microbiology and Gastroenterology, and is a close community of scientists working on different aspects of microbiome analysis in relation to health and diseases.
General information:
The Department of Genetics, UMCG is looking for an enthusiastic senior postdoc in the field of bioinformatics, microbiome and metabolomics analyses. The focus of the postdoc will be to assist on the current ongoing projects of Lifelines-NEXT. Lifelines-NEXT is a longitudinal birth cohort of the Northern Netherlands which aims to recruit 1,500 mother-infant-pairs and collects extensive metadata and biological data of parents and infants. Currently, microbiome and virome data, along with extensive phenotypic data has been collected and processed. The stool metabolomics and metagenomics analysis of other datasets are planned. The overall focus of the project is the longitudinal analysis of gut microbiome and virome in relation to maternal, environmental and birth factors and infants’ health, starting from [pre-]pregnancy to 1 year of life. For the follow up timepoints (2-6 years) the collection started.
The position is embedded in the microbiome group in the department of Genetics, UMCG. The group includes around 25 enthusiastic PhD students and postdocs working on the analysis of metagenomics data, genetics of microbiome, population cohorts and microbiome studies in patients with gastrointestinal diseases.
The UMCG has a preventive Hepatitis B policy. The UMCG can provide you with the vaccination, should it be required for your position.
In case of specific professions a ‘Certificate of Good Conduct’ is required.
You will be appointed as a postdoc in the Dutch University job-ranking system (UFO). Duration of the postdoc project is 2 years, with the possibility of extension.
Your salary will be a maximum of €5.088,- gross per month (scale 10), depending on your qualifications and relevant experience, based on a full-time appointment. In addition, the UMCG will offer you 8% holiday pay, and 8.3% end-of-year bonus. The conditions of employment comply with the Collective Labour Agreement for Medical Centres (CAO-UMC).
Dr. Alexandra Zhernakova professor
Please use the the digital application form at the bottom of this page - only these will be processed.
You can apply until 9 April 2023.
Within half an hour after sending the digital application form you will receive an email- confirmation with further information.
We would like it if you would contact us if you have any questions about working at UMCG