The Formulation Scientist is responsible for the development and optimization of new and existing formulations for a variety of products. This includes conducting research, designing experiments, and analyzing data to identify and implement improvements in product performance.
Institute of Life Sciences has a broad vision of carrying out high-quality multidisciplinary research in the area of life sciences. The goal is for the overall development and betterment of human health, longevity, agriculture, and the environment. The stated mission of the institution is to work towards upliftment of the human society and generate skilled human resources for future India.
M.Pharma or Ph.D. in any branch of Life Sciences or Biotechnology with at least two peer-reviewed international publication in Science Citation indexed; experience in molecular biology related techniques including PCR, recombinant DNA cloning techniques, plant transformation, and library preparation methodologies for NGS.
Define, organize, plan and execute analytical activities and materials characterization of pharmaceutical injectables in compliance with current international/regional/national regulations with the support of senior colleagues and team members.
Expertise in Molecular Biology, Cell Biology, Structural biology, Immunology. The candidate should also be familiar with studying Protein- small molecule interaction, Tissue culture techniques, animal handling, enzymatic assays, Immune phenotyping.
Ph.D, MD, MS, MDS or MVSc, ME, M.Pharm, M.Tech equivalent degree Pragmatic strategies for the delivery of phytodrugs across BBB through plant derived exosomes for the management of neuroinflammatory diseases.
The institute was founded in 1985 as the ‘Biotechnology Centre’ of Indian Agricultural Research Institute (IARI) for molecular biology and biotechnology research in crop plants. The prescience of the role of biotechnology in agriculture led to a bigger responsibility for this centre and it was elevated as National Research Centre on Plant Biotechnology in the year 1993 (Now NIPB).