To the ccp4bb community,

The Structural Biology Initiative ( https://asrc.gc.cuny.edu/structbio ) of the 
CUNY Advanced Science Research Center has an available position for an X-ray 
Crystallography Facility Manager (Research Assistant Professor) starting 
immediately.

The CUNY Advanced Science Research Center is a new cutting-edge research 
institution located in New York City, bringing together five Initiatives whose 
research areas span many length scales: Structural Biology, Nanoscience, 
Photonics, Neuroscience, and Environmental Science. The Structural Biology 
Initiative (SBI) features seven tenure-track and research faculty members, 
pursuing research problems across biological and chemical topics using 
techniques as diverse as X-ray diffraction, cryo-EM, NMR, solution biophysics, 
and advanced microscopy. The SBI also hosts state-of-the-art core facilities in 
three different areas: nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, mass 
spectrometry (MS), and X-ray crystallography.

The Structural Biology Initiative seeks a Facility Manager/Research Assistant 
Professor for the X-ray Macromolecular Crystallography Facility, which is 
already equipped with a Rigaku Alchemist DT liquid handler, two ARI Gryphon 
crystallization robots, and two Rigaku Minstrel DT crystal imagers at room 
temperature and 4°C. The selected candidate will be responsible not only for 
directing day-to-day operations of the facility in concert with users from the 
ASRC and externally, but also for developing an independent research program 
that leverages emerging technologies in X-ray crystallography.

The ASRC is located in upper Manhattan, immediately adjacent to the New York 
Structural Biology Center (NYSBC), a consortium of CUNY and eight other New 
York academic institutions with world-class cryo-EM, NMR, and X-ray facilities 
on-site and at Brookhaven National Laboratory. BNL, located just 70 miles from 
the ASRC, includes a newly constructed synchrotron, National Synchrotron Light 
Source II, which opened in 2015. NSLS-II is now the brightest synchrotron light 
source in the United State, offering X-rays that are 10,000x brighter than the 
original NSLS. The ASRC Structural Biology Initiative has access to several 
cutting-edge microfocus beamlines equipped for automated crystal handling and 
data collection at NSLS-II, including the NYX beamline via CUNY’s membership in 
NYSBC and the AMX and FMX beamlines via proposals.

Please find more detailed information about the position and officially apply 
via the following URL:

https://cuny.jobs/new-york-ny/macromolecular-crystallization-facility-manager-research-assistant-professor-structural-biology/E71B43986B2A4CC9920D1A83B5A90569/job/

Review of applications will begin on October 16.

Best regards,

Daniel Keedy

—
Daniel A. Keedy, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Structural Biology Initiative, CUNY Advanced Science Research Center
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, City College of New York
Biochemistry and Chemistry Ph.D. Programs, CUNY Graduate Center
www.keedylab.org<http://www.keedylab.org>   |  
dke...@gc.cuny.edu<mailto:dke...@gc.cuny.edu> (NOT @asrc)  |  212-413-3246


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