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The Singapore-ETH Centre was established in 2010 by ETH Zurich - The Swiss Federal Institute of Technology and Singapore’s National Research Foundation (NRF), as part of the NRF’s CREATE campus. As ETH Zurich's only research centre outside of Switzerland, the centre has strengthened the research capacity of ETH Zurich to develop sustainable solutions to global challenges in Switzerland, Singapore and the surrounding regions.
Set in Asia, in a rapidly urbanising region, the Singapore-ETH Centre aims to provide practical solutions to some of the most pressing challenges on urban sustainability, resilience and health through its programmes: Future Cities Lab Global (FCL Global) and Future Health Technologies (FHT).
The centre serves as an intellectual hub for research, bringing together principal investigators and researchers from diverse disciplines and backgrounds. To promote the exchange of ideas and expertise, our researchers actively collaborate with universities and research institutes and engage with industry and government agencies to translate knowledge to practical solutions to real-world problems.
Advanced Patient-derived 3D Bone Organoids for Personalised Osteoporosis Drug Screening
Fragility fractures remain a major consequence of impaired skeletal health in older adults, frequently resulting in reduced mobility, loss of independence, and long-term disability. While current standards of care provide valuable tools for evaluating skeletal health and fracture risk, they do not fully capture patient-specific biological responses to altered bone remodelling, mechanical loading, inflammation, and pharmacological intervention. Osteoporosis and related age-associated bone disorders are highly heterogeneous, with individuals differing in bone formation capacity, osteoclast activity, inflammatory status, mineralisation dynamics, and mechanoadaptive potential. These biological differences can influence both fracture risk and response to therapy, highlighting the need for human-relevant models that can support more personalised approaches to osteoporosis care.
Building on the dynamic bone organoid culture platform developed in the Laboratory for Bone Biomechanics at ETH Zurich, this project aims to further develop and apply patient-derived 3D bone organoid models for in vitro osteoporosis research and personalised drug screening. The postdoctoral researcher will lead the optimisation of workflows to 3D print patient-derived mesenchymal stromal cells, guide osteogenic differentiation under dynamic mechanical stimulation, coculture with peripheral blood mononuclear cells, and assess donor-specific responses to pharmacological interventions. The resulting organoid models will enable the investigation of osteoporosis-related remodelling, immune-bone interactions, age-related comorbidity effects, and personalised drug-response profiles.
Biological readouts from these models will contribute to predictive modelling frameworks for bone remodelling trajectories, treatment response, and fracture risk, supporting the advancement of precision musculoskeletal care.
The Postdoctoral researcher will interact closely with engineers, clinicians, biologists, computational researchers, to generate robust biological datasets for personalised modelling of bone remodelling drug response, and fracture prevention.
Some key components in the work are:
Applicants should hold a PhD degree in biomedical engineering, or a related discipline.
The candidate should have strong previous experience in tissue engineering, mammalian cell culture, and advanced in vitro model development. Experience with 3D cell culture, organoids, bone or musculoskeletal research, bioreactor-based culture systems, or mechanical stimulation of tissues would be highly advantageous. Experience with human primary cells, mesenchymal stromal cells, peripheral blood mononuclear cells, osteoclast differentiation, immune cell assays, or inflammatory signalling would be considered a strong advantage.
Experience in organoid-based drug screening, pharmacological response assays, or disease modelling. Experience with molecular, histological, imaging, and biochemical techniques, such as immunostaining, microscopy, gene expression analysis, cytokine profiling, mineralisation assays, or osteoclast activity assays, would be advantageous. Experience with computed tomography, image analysis, Python-based data analysis, or quantitative data analysis would be an additional asset.
Candidates should be highly motivated and have a strong interest in skeletal research, precision medicine, and translational in vitro models. They should be able to work independently, coordinate complex experimental workflows, contribute to project planning and deliverables, engage constructively with supervisors and collaborators, and mentor junior researchers where applicable. Applicants must have excellent written and spoken English communication skills. Familiarity with across-cultural and interdisciplinary research environment would be advantageous.
We look forward to receiving your online application with the following documents:
Further information about The Singapore-ETH Centre can be found on our website. Questions regarding the position should be directed to Dr. Chris Steffi (ETH Zurich), [email protected]
Please note that we exclusively accept applications submitted through our online application portal. Applications via email or postal services will not be considered.
We would like to point out that the pre-selection is carried out by the responsible recruiters and not by artificial intelligence.
ETH Zürich is well known for its excellent education, ground-breaking fundamental research and for implementing its results directly into practice.
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