Grade UE07: £40,247 - £47,874 per annum
CMVM / Institute for Regeneration and Repair / Centre for Inflammation Research
Full-time: 35 hours per week
Fixed Term dates: until 31 January 2026 - it is anticipated that a further extension may be available subject to funder approvals
We are looking for an enthusiastic and ambitious postdoctoral research fellow with interests in neuroimmunology to help us investigate infection as a complication of stroke recovery and the neuroimmune mechanisms that underpin these changes.
This post is advertised as full-time (35 hours per week) and we are open to considering flexible working patterns.
The Opportunity:
We are currently working on understanding the long-term consequences of stroke on the immune system and how this may relate to vulnerability to infection and cognitive outcomes after stroke. This project will use pre-clinical models of stroke combined with vaccination and/ or respiratory infection models. The project will have a focus on the adaptive immune system and include investigations of the impact of stroke on immunological memory and the role of lymphocytes in the recovering brain.
Informal enquiries to Dr Laura McCulloch are welcomed (laura.mcculloch@ed.ac.uk)
The research fellow will be based in the McCulloch lab within the Centre for Inflammation Research ( CIR is within the Edinburgh Bioquarter campus which hosts a rich local immunology, neuroscience and vascular community co-located on a major biomedical and health research campus (
Your skills and attributes for success:
You will have a PhD (or PhD near completion) or equivalent qualification in a relevant biomedical science and ideally have deep knowledge, interests and skills in neuroimmunology, cerebrovascular disease, respiratory infection or adaptive immune biology
Experience in general in in vivo procedures
Experience in immune cell isolation and downstream immunophenotyping e.g. flow cytometry, -omics profiling
Expertise in relevant approaches and models, analytical techniques and methods e.g. immunohistochemistry, microscopy, ELISA, qPCR, statistical approaches
Ability to communicate complex information clearly, orally and in writing.