The Hood lab is looking to recruit 2 PhD students to study mitochondrial 
function in relation to 
the tradeoff between reproduction and longevity in the wild house mouse. 
Specifically, we are 
interested in tissue-specific variation in respiratory function and oxidative 
stress of 
mitochondria throughout the life of an animal.  Students will contribute to the 
funded project 
and develop their own research questions. Students will receive RA support. 
During at least 1 
semester per year, the student will be encouraged to teach laboratories to 
building to gain 
experience that will be critical to future endeavors.
 
The project is supported by a 5-year NSF CAREER award to Hood. Work on 
mitochondrial 
function is relatively new to the Hood lab but we work closely with an 
established expert on 
mitochondrial function, Dr. Andreas Kavazis in the Dept. of Kinesiology at 
Auburn and another 
lab with an emerging interest in mitonuclear interaction and sexual selection, 
Dr. Geoff Hill, 
Dept. of Biological Sciences. Prospective students can learn more about the lab 
and read the 
abstracts of our funded projects at 
http://www.thehoodlaboratory.com/#!funding/cto0  
 
Interested applicants should send an email to Dr. Wendy Hood at 
[email protected].  In the 
email, please include a description of prior research experience, your training 
in evolutionary 
biology, physiology, and cell biology, your undergraduate and graduate 
institution (if post-
masters), GPA and GRE scores, and the email address and/or phone number for 1-2 
references.  You can learn more about  Biological Sciences at Auburn and our 
grad program 
at http://www.auburn.edu/academic/cosam//departments/biology/index.htm.

Thanks!

Wendy Hood
Dept of Biological Sciences 
Auburn University 
[email protected]

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