Back to search results

PhD Studentship: Statistical Modelling for Single-Cell RNA Sequencing Data for Crucial Health Applications

University of Exeter - University of Exeter – Living Systems Institute

Qualification Type: PhD
Location: Devon, Exeter
Funding for: UK Students
Funding amount: £20,776 annual stipend
Hours: Full Time
Placed On: 31st January 2025
Closes: 16th March 2025
Reference: 5486

Statistical modelling for single-cell RNA sequencing data for crucial health applications

Supervisors: Magdalena Strauss (Mathematics and Statistics),

Akshay Bhinge (Clinical and Biomedical Sciences),

Marc Goodfellow (Mathematics and Statistics)

Single-cell RNA sequencing can quantify the activity of each human gene in individual cells. This has allowed much better insight into heterogeneity across different cells, and helped identify potential drug targets in precision medicine. This fully funded PhD project applies principled statistical modelling to help identify causes of disease and potential drug targets, and to understand mechanisms behind resistance to drugs. 

Application 1: identifying potential therapeutic targets for ALS

ALS is a fatal neurodegenerative condition characterised by a loss of motor neurons that leads to progressive paralysis and death usually within 3-5 years post-diagnosis. The analysis performed as part of this PhD project will aim to identify key genes as potential therapeutic targets, i.e. genes that will lead to a desired therapeutic outcome if targeted by a drug.

Application 2:  identifying mechanisms of drug resistance in cancer

When cells divide, mistakes lead to DNA mutations. DNA mutations are associated with many diseases. Precision genome editing allows the re-creation of mutations at large scale in a lab. The student will investigate the mechanism with which mutations cause drug resistance in cancer, in collaboration with the Coelho lab at the Wellcome Sanger Institute, who will be performing the experimental work.

Application 3:  identifying causes of congenital heart defects

Congenital heart defects (CHDs) are the most common birth defect, affecting ~1% of live births. Despite advances in medical and surgical interventions, they are a leading cause of foetal death and infant mortality. Despite this over half of all CHD cases have no definitive cause. In collaboration with the Tyser lab (University of Cambridge) the student will explore the relationship between phenotype and genotype using CHD models to define mechanisms which could underpin disease.

Statistical challenges

The applications described above have a complicated multi-level structure. Data include several patients or replicates, several types of cells, several different genetic backgrounds, or groups of cells edited using different reagents. Accurate modelling of structures and dependencies in the data is essential to control the rate of false positives concerning the identification of potential therapeutic targets. Further statistical areas relevant to this project include high-dimensional statistics and uncertainty quantification. 

Candidate suitability

This PhD studentship is a great opportunity for a student interested in applying statistics in a collaborative and inter-disciplinary setting, with impactful applications in medical research. The project will suit students with a strong background in an appropriate quantitative subject such as mathematics, statistics, machine learning, computer science, bioinformatics, physics or econometrics, and an enthusiasm for medical applications. Applicants for this studentship must have obtained a First or Upper Second Class UK Honours degree, or the equivalent qualifications gained outside the UK. Preferably, applicants should have or be about to obtain, an MSc degree, or the equivalent qualifications gained outside the UK. Experience in coding in Python or R is essential.

For eligible students the studentship will cover Home fees plus an annual tax-free stipend of at least £ 20,776 for 3.5 years full-time.

We value your feedback on the quality of our adverts. If you have a comment to make about the overall quality of this advert, or its categorisation then please send us your feedback
Advert information

Type / Role:

Subject Area(s):

Location(s):

PhD tools
 

PhD Alert Created

Job Alert Created

Your PhD alert has been successfully created for this search.

Your job alert has been successfully created for this search.

Ok Ok

PhD Alert Created

Job Alert Created

Your PhD alert has been successfully created for this search.

Your job alert has been successfully created for this search.

Manage your job alerts Manage your job alerts

Account Verification Missing

In order to create multiple job alerts, you must first verify your email address to complete your account creation

Request verification email Request verification email

jobs.ac.uk Account Required

In order to create multiple alerts, you must create a jobs.ac.uk jobseeker account

Create Account Create Account

Alert Creation Failed

Unfortunately, your account is currently blocked. Please login to unblock your account.

Email Address Blocked

We received a delivery failure message when attempting to send you an email and therefore your email address has been blocked. You will not receive job alerts until your email address is unblocked. To do so, please choose from one of the two options below.

Max Alerts Reached

A maximum of 5 Job Alerts can be created against your account. Please remove an existing alert in order to create this new Job Alert

Manage your job alerts Manage your job alerts

Creation Failed

Unfortunately, your alert was not created at this time. Please try again.

Ok Ok

Create PhD Alert

Create Job Alert

When you create this PhD alert we will email you a selection of PhDs matching your criteria.When you create this job alert we will email you a selection of jobs matching your criteria. Our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy apply to this service. Any personal data you provide in setting up this alert is processed in accordance with our Privacy Notice

Create PhD Alert

Create Job Alert

When you create this PhD alert we will email you a selection of PhDs matching your criteria.When you create this job alert we will email you a selection of jobs matching your criteria. Our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy apply to this service. Any personal data you provide in setting up this alert is processed in accordance with our Privacy Notice

 
 
 
More PhDs from University of Exeter

Show all PhDs for this organisation …

More PhDs like this
Join in and follow us

Browser Upgrade Recommended

jobs.ac.uk has been optimised for the latest browsers.

For the best user experience, we recommend viewing jobs.ac.uk on one of the following:

Google Chrome Firefox Microsoft Edge