PhD Candidate or Research Assistant in Optical-Molecular Diagnostics | PhD candidate or Research Assistant in Optical-Molecular Diagnostics (f/m/d)

Leibniz-Institut für Photonische Technologien

Deutschland
Published Jul 28, 2025
Full-time
Fixed-term

Job Summary

The Leibniz Institute of Photonics Technology (Leibniz IPHT) is seeking a highly motivated PhD candidate or Research Assistant to join their Optical-Molecular Diagnostics and Systems Technology department in Jena. This part-time (60%) role focuses on researching, establishing, verifying, and validating multi-parameter systems for antibiotic-resistant and virulent bacteria relevant to human and veterinary medicine. The successful candidate will conduct laboratory work across biological safety levels S1, S2, and S3**, performing conventional microbiological procedures, advanced molecular biology techniques, and bioinformatics analyses. The role involves independent feasibility studies, collaboration with industry partners to translate scientific results into products, and preparing project documentation and scientific publications. This position offers an opportunity to contribute to cutting-edge research in a world-class facility with strong ties to academia, fostering professional growth in a supportive and interdisciplinary environment.

Required Skills

Education

Master’s degree (or equivalent or higher degree) in Biochemistry, Biology, Biotechnology, Microbiology, Chemistry, Chemical Biology, or advanced/completed studies in Medicine or Veterinary Medicine.

Experience

  • Experience in dealing with pathogenic microorganisms is desirable
  • Experience in the supervision of students (internships, Master, Bachelor) is desirable
  • Experience in diagnostic laboratory procedures or hospital hygiene facilities is helpful
  • Industrial experience in the field of biotechnology is welcome

Languages

German (Fluent)English (Fluent)

Additional

  • Willingness to work with pathogenic (safety level 2 and 3**) and/or antibiotic-resistant bacteria and potentially infectious patient material (such as blood, stool samples, wound swabs).