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Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, Old Road Campus Research Building, Roosevelt Drive, Headington, Oxford, OX3 7DQ

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"Postdoctoral Research Scientist – Statistics"

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Postdoctoral Research Scientist – Statistics

Research Grade 7

16 March 2026, 12:00 midday

Location

Old Road Campus Research Building, Roosevelt Drive, Headington, Oxford, OX3 7DQ

Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, University of Oxford

Type

Full-time, Fixed-term until 31 May 2027

Salary

£39,424 - £53,483 p.a.

Required Qualifications

PhD/DPhil in computational chemistry, structural biology/bioinformatics, statistics, machine learning or related
Strong track record in genetics-based, physicochemistry-based, structure-based computational/statistical methods
Experience with high-performance computing infrastructure

Research Areas

Immunoinformatics
B-cell receptors (BCRs)/Antibodies
Cancer tumour microenvironment
Protein informatics
Computational statistics
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Postdoctoral Research Scientist – Statistics

Postdoctoral Research Scientist – Statistics

Location: Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, Old Road Campus Research Building, Roosevelt Drive, Headington, Oxford, OX3 7DQ

We are seeking to appoint a Postdoctoral Research Scientist in Statistics to join Professor Xin Lu’s group, with an affiliation with OPIG.

The Lu Group, based at the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, and the Oxford Protein Informatics Group (OPIG), based at the Department of Statistics, are recruiting for a Postdoctoral Researcher to perform computational analysis and optimisation of cancer-related B-cell receptors (BCRs)/antibodies.

The Lu Group seek to identify molecular mechanisms that control cellular plasticity and suppress tumour growth. The group works closely with clinicians to investigate cell plasticity in upper gastrointestinal tract cancer initiation, resistance to therapy (oesophageal cancer and gastric cancer), and to discover novel molecules with therapeutic potential.

OPIG works on diverse problems across immunoinformatics, protein structure, and small molecule drug discovery; they use statistics, AI, and computation to generate biological and medical insight. The group focuses on the development of novel algorithms, tools, and databases that are open source and freely available to all users, academic and commercial.

The overall goal of the work is to understand whether the B-cell arm of the adaptive immune system can explain why some individuals are surprisingly resilient to cancer arising or progressing. If this is the case, then the longer-term ambition is to leverage this understanding therapeutically.

Work packages include performing analyses of tumour microenvironment BCRs with recurrently observed autoantigen reactivity profiles, assessing which existing computational strategies maximally inform prioritisation of BCR sequences for cloning and analysis, guiding the optimisation of clones of especial interest, and creating a future-proof database. To achieve this, you will have access to the OPIG compute cluster.

You will also liaise with the broader team of researchers connected to the “Cancer Antibody Atlas” project. This team has recently won a prestigious c. £20m CRUK/NIH grant to characterise BCRs across thousands of tumour microenvironments and cancer-free settings. You will periodically attend and present at joint meetings with researchers funded by this work to inform hypothesis generation and, through collaborative discussion, to design subsequent work packages. You will have the opportunity to develop innovative algorithms and methodologies in the area of immunoinformatics.

It is essential that you hold or be close to completion of a PhD/DPhil in computational chemistry, structural biology/bioinformatics, statistics, machine learning or related field. You will have a strong track record of applying genetics-based, physicochemistry-based and structure-based computational or statistical methodologies to biological data, alongside prior experience of high-performance computing infrastructure.

Applications for this vacancy should be made online and you will need to upload a supporting statement and CV. Your supporting statement must explain how you meet each of the selection criteria for the post using examples of your skills and experience. Please restrict your documentation to your CV and supporting statement only. Any other documents will be requested at a later date. This position is offered full time on a fixed term contract until 31 May 2027 and is funded by Ludwig.

Only applications received before 12 midday on Monday, 16 March 2026 will be considered. Please quote 185326 on all correspondence.

Contact Person: Bogdan Tiritelnicu
Vacancy ID: 185326
Closing Date & Time: 16-Mar-2026
Pay Scale: RESEARCH GRADE 7
Contact Email: recruitment@ndm.ox.ac.uk
Salary (£): Research Grade 7: £39,424 - £47,779 with a discretionary range to £53,483 p.a. (pro rata). This is inclusive of a pensionable Oxford University Weighting of £1,730 per year (pro rata).

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Frequently Asked Questions

🎓What qualifications are required for the Postdoctoral Research Scientist in Statistics role?

You must hold or be close to completing a PhD/DPhil in computational chemistry, structural biology/bioinformatics, statistics, machine learning or a related field. A strong track record applying genetics-based, physicochemistry-based and structure-based computational/statistical methodologies to biological data is essential, plus prior experience with high-performance computing (HPC) infrastructure. Explore more on postdoc opportunities and research jobs.

🔬What are the main responsibilities in this statistics postdoc position?

Responsibilities include computational analysis and optimisation of cancer-related B-cell receptors (BCRs)/antibodies, analysing tumour microenvironment BCRs, prioritising sequences for cloning, guiding clone optimisation, and building a future-proof database. You will use the OPIG compute cluster, liaise with the Cancer Antibody Atlas team, and develop innovative immunoinformatics algorithms. Check postdoctoral success tips.

📝What is the application process and deadline for this Oxford postdoc job?

Apply online before 12 midday on 16 March 2026, uploading a CV and supporting statement addressing each selection criterion with examples. Quote Vacancy ID: 185326. No other documents initially. Contact recruitment@ndm.ox.ac.uk. See free resume template and cover letter template for help.

💰What is the salary, contract type, and location for this role?

Salary is Research Grade 7: £39,424 - £47,779 p.a. (discretionary to £53,483), including Oxford University Weighting of £1,730 p.a. (pro rata). Full-time fixed-term contract until 31 May 2027, funded by Ludwig. Location: Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, Oxford OX3 7DQ. View professor salaries and university salaries for context.

🤝What research groups and projects will I work with?

Join Professor Xin Lu’s Group at Ludwig Institute and affiliate with OPIG (Oxford Protein Informatics Group). Part of the Cancer Antibody Atlas project (£20m CRUK/NIH grant) studying BCRs in tumour microenvironments. Access OPIG compute resources and collaborate on immunoinformatics, AI, and open-source tools. Learn more via research assistant jobs and clinical research jobs.

🌍Is visa sponsorship available for international applicants?

Visa sponsorship is not mentioned in the job posting. Check the full listing and contact recruitment@ndm.ox.ac.uk for eligibility. International candidates should review higher ed postdoc jobs and Oxford's policies.
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