BNA Face of the Fortnight: Dr Dorothy Tse
6th May 2024
Dementia is the greatest health challenge of our century.
To date there is no way to prevent it or even slow its progression, and there is an urgent need to fill the knowledge gap in our basic understanding of the diseases that cause it.
The UK Dementia Research Institute (UK DRI) is the biggest UK initiative supporting research to fill the major knowledge gap in our basic understanding of the diseases that cause dementia.
Research from UK DRI at UCL covers the journey from the patient to the laboratory and back to the patient with improved diagnosis, biomarkers and candidate therapies put to the test. Led by Professor Karen Duff, UK DRI Centre Director, the team addresses the key unanswered mechanistic questions that link genetic and lifecourse factors to dysfunction in molecular pathways, in cells and in neural systems during the progression of the dementias. This work will be enhanced by clinical resource to link lab work to the clinic.
The Krupic Lab aims to understand how accumulation of Tau and amyloid-beta pathology affects hippocampal-entorhinal neural networks and cognitive functions in age-related neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease. We employ cutting-edge neural recording techniques such as in vivo Neuropixels and two-photon imaging in behaving mice. We also develop and employ state-of-the-art behavioural techniques such as smart-Kages for comprehensive assessment of an animal’s naturalistic behaviours and virtual environments combined with neural recordings; and develop analogous tasks for humans to identify the digital biomarkers to facilitate early AD diagnostics. Finally, we use computational approaches to model the underlying mechanisms of EC-HP function and disease progression.
We are looking for a highly motivated, experienced, and self-driven Postdoctoral Research Fellow to join the Krupic Lab to help investigate the role of disrupted deep brain circuitry in diminished spatial memory function in Alzheimer’s disease.
Our laboratory employs neural recordings using multi-tetrodes, Neuropixels, and two-photon imaging in head-fixed mice navigating in virtual enclosures as well as comprehensive monitoring of mouse behaviour in the smart-Kages (the home monitoring system that was recently developed in the lab). One of your main tasks will be to help implement the long-term neural recordings in the smart Kages.
You will hold a PhD in neuroscience or a related subject and have significant experience with in vivo electrophysiological recordings and data analysis in behaving mice, and good proven programming skills with MATLAB or Python as well as good knowledge of statistics and complex neural data analysis. Excellent experience performing in vivo surgeries, such as chronic implantation of multi-tetrodes, Neuropixels, or similar, along with maintaining mice during the chronic experience, pre- and post-surgery is also essential..
This role meets the eligibility requirements for a skilled worker certificate of sponsorship or a global talent visa under UK Visas and Immigration legislation. Therefore, UCL welcomes applications from international applicants who require a visa.
To apply visit here.
Informal enquiries regarding the role can be addressed to Dr Julija Krupic (j.krupic@ucl.ac.uk).