National AI Awards 2025Discover AI's trailblazers! Join us to celebrate innovation and nominate industry leaders.

Nominate & Attend

Principal Scientist – Multiplexed assays of variant effects (MAVE)

Wellcome Sanger Institute
Saffron Walden
2 days ago
Create job alert

Social network you want to login/join with:
Principal Scientist – Multiplexed assays of variant effects (MAVE), Hinxton col-narrow-left
Client: Location: Hinxton, United Kingdom
Job Category: Other
-
EU work permit required: Yes
col-narrow-right
Job Reference: e1b2991fd39e
Job Views: 4
Posted: 29.06.2025
Expiry Date: 13.08.2025
col-wide
Job Description: Do you want to help us improve human health and understand life on Earth? Make your mark by shaping the future to enable or deliver life-changing science to solve some of humanity’s greatest challenges.
An exciting opportunity has arisen for an experienced scientist to join the Scientific Operations team at the Sanger Institute to help define and implement a coordinated strategy for the establishment and development of technologies to study Multiplexed Assays of Variant Effects (MAVE) across the institute. This will involve identifying, developing, designing and testing potential solutions for functional genomics tools that fulfil unmet scientific or technical needs; supporting the implementation of appropriate technologies and the maintenance of high-quality outputs by operational teams.
About the Role:
You will join a multi-disciplinary team working highly collaboratively with faculty teams, research groups and existing experts to implement and utilise cutting-edge emerging technologies for CRISPR-based functional genomics. You will contribute to the MAVEscience of the institute, which is a growing area over the next 5-year funding cycle and beyond.

You will be responsible for:
Helping to develop and implement a strategy to support the development of the current and next generations of techniques, instruments and methodologies in the rapidly growing area of MAVE and functional genomics to meet the demands across the institute.
Providing support, education and training to Operational staff.
Keeping abreast of the rapidly advancing technology landscape and assess this against the needs of the institute to provide expert input into the development of future research.
About You:
You will need to have excellent communication and relationship-building skills to integrate multiple research and operational teams and will need to deal with rapid shifts and changes in complex technical requirements as projects develop and priorities change. It is also critical that you can design, implement and troubleshoot experiments and identify areas of improvement.

In addition, you will need:
Extensive and demonstrable experience working in an applied research or technical development environment
Extensive in-depth understanding and proven experience in functional genomics i.e. molecular biology/genetics, gene editing including CRISPR and/or sequencing technology
Ability to build and maintain relationships and inspire confidence and respect at all levels; a strong team player
Experience in designing and delivering technical development projects of high complexity
Detailed and extensive working knowledge of applied research methods (e.g. statistical analysis, experimental design, good research practice).
About Us:
Scientific Operations comprises the Institute’s scientific facilities across sequencing, cellular biology, spatial genomics, flow cytometry, tissue culture, gene editing, sample preparation and management, and associated research and development activities. These activities are facilitated by project and relationship management, quality assurance and business administration teams. We collaborate with programme research scientists to develop new techniques and build new platforms to translate ambitious experimental ideas into everyday reality. The post holder will be based within Cellular Operations, but will work closely with Sequencing Operations, SciOps R&D teams and the Adams and Hurles teams who are experts on MAVE technologies and their applications to research in the areas of cancer and developmental disorders.

#J-18808-Ljbffr

Related Jobs

View all jobs

Principal Scientist

Principal Scientist

Principal Scientist (Oxford)

Principal Scientist - Endothelial Screening (London)

Principal Scientist (Oxford)

Principal Scientist Functional Genomics (London)

National AI Awards 2025

Subscribe to Future Tech Insights for the latest jobs & insights, direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service.

Industry Insights

Discover insightful articles, industry insights, expert tips, and curated resources.

How to Present Biotech Concepts to Non-Scientists: A Public Speaking Guide for Job Seekers

In today’s biotechnology job market, your ability to explain complex science clearly is just as important as your lab skills. Whether you're applying for a research role, pitching to investors, or collaborating with marketing teams, you'll often need to present technical information to people without a scientific background. This blog explores how biotechnology job seekers can develop and deliver compelling presentations that make sense to non-scientists. From structuring your content to designing effective slides and using storytelling to bring data to life, these techniques will help you stand out in interviews and on the job.

Biotech Jobs Employer Hotlist 2025: 50 UK Companies Actively Hiring Right Now 

Bookmark this guide – we refresh it every quarter so you always know who’s really expanding their life‑science teams. The UK biotechnology scene is on a tear in 2025. Venture & follow‑on funding hit £3.5 billion last year, up 94 % on 2023, and Q1 2025 alone brought in another £924 million of equity for scaling therapeutics, diagnostics & deep‑tech platforms  bioindustry.org. Meanwhile, Westminster’s new industrial strategy pledges a record £86 billion for science & tech, with life sciences top of the eight “high‑growth” priority sectors . The consequence? Hiring is white‑hot. From big‑pharma giants to gene‑editing start‑ups, employers need research scientists, QC analysts, bioprocess engineers, bioinformaticians, regulatory specialists & commercial leads – right now. Below you’ll find 50 organisations that have posted UK vacancies or announced head‑count growth during the past eight weeks. They’re grouped into five bite‑size categories so you can jump straight to the type of employer – & mission – that excites you. For every entry you’ll see: Main UK hub Example recent vacancy Why it’s worth your time (tech, culture, impact) Use the internal search on BiotechnologyJobs.co.uk to pull up live roles, or set a free alert so fresh openings land in your inbox.

Return-to-Work Pathways: Relaunch Your Biotechnology Career with Returnships, Flexible & Hybrid Roles

Returning to work after a career break can feel like stepping into a new frontier—especially in a fast-evolving sector such as biotechnology. Whether you’ve paused your professional journey for parenting, caring responsibilities or another life chapter, the UK’s biotech industry now offers a variety of return-to-work pathways designed to help you transition back smoothly. From formal returnships and part-time contracts to hybrid and fully flexible roles, these programmes acknowledge the value of your transferable skills and life experience. In this guide tailored for parents and carers, you’ll discover how to: Grasp the current demand for biotech talent in the UK Translate your organisational, communication and resilience skills into the laboratory and beyond Tackle common re-entry challenges with practical solutions Refresh your scientific and technical knowledge through targeted learning Access returnship and re-entry programmes specifically in biotech Find roles that fit around family commitments—be they flexible, hybrid or full-time Balance work with caring duties Navigate applications, interviews and networking in the biotech world Learn from inspiring returner success stories Get quick answers in our FAQ section Whether you’re keen to step back into a research lab, quality control, regulatory affairs or bioinformatics team, this article will map out the steps and resources you need to reignite your biotechnology career.