Genetic determinants of antibiotic tolerance in mycobacteria
The Department of Biomedicine is a joint initiative of the University of Basel and the University Hospitals Basel. It unites basic and clinical scientists to advance our understanding of health and disease and to develop therapies for areas of unmet medical need. With over 70 research groups and 800 employees, the Department of Biomedicine is the largest department at the University, located across six sites in the city centre.
The position
We are looking for a postdoctoral researcher in molecular microbiology to investigate the genetic basis of drug tolerance in Mycobacterium abscessus, one of the most challenging to treat bacterial pathogens. The position is part of a newly funded international consortium that brings together experts in mycobacterial genetics, high-throughput phenotyping, structural biology, and clinical research across Switzerland, Israel, Australia and the USA.
The project
Antibiotic treatments for M. abscessus fail in more than half of patients despite in vitro drug activity. A key reason is drug tolerance, the ability of bacteria to survive antibiotic exposure without classical resistance. Our lab (boecklab.com) has developed a large-scale live-cell imaging platform that tracks hundreds of millions of bacteria during antibiotic exposure, enabling systematic analysis of killing dynamics across strains and drugs. Using this approach, we have shown that bacterial survival is strongly shaped by the bacterial genetic background and predicts treatment outcomes (Nature Microbiology, 2026). In this project, we now aim to identify the genetic determinants of bacterial survival and death and to build a species-wide tolerance atlas linking genotype to phenotype and clinical outcome. The work will provide fundamental insights into bacterial biology and identify targets for improved therapies.