The people recruited will work on the ATLASea programme, which aims to sample, sequence and analyse the genomes of 4,500 marine species from the French EEZ, with a high coverage of species from mainland France and including species from overseas territories. Led by the CNRS and the CEA and funded for 8 years, ATLASea is a consortium of 7 institutions and 5 research federations and infrastructures, bringing together around 50 engineers and researchers.

The following positions are part of the targeted projects:

  1. WHEEL-Sea, which will ensure the governance of the ATLASea program,
  2. SEQ-Sea, which will carry out the sequencing of samples at Genoscope, with the objective of obtaining reference genomes, i.e., complete genomes. It will also be responsible for the assembly and initial annotation of genes.
  3. BYTE-Sea, which will improve and store the computer annotation of this DNA in order to locate the genes, retrace their evolutionary history and assign them functions; the genomes will ultimately be stored in open databases accessible to the international community:
  • ATLASea Recruitment: DevOps Engineer (M/W)
    ATLASea is a program focused on the genomics of marine biodiversity along the French coast. Led by the CNRS and the CEA, it includes numerous partner institutions in France and is part of a broader international context. ATLASea will sequence the genomes of 4,500 species along the French coastline in mainland France and overseas. The 8-year program will sample marine
  • ATLASea Recruitment: Technician in molecular biology, biotechnology (M/W)
    Job title: Technician in molecular biology, biotechnology (M/W)Number of positions proposed: 1Type of contract: Fixed-term contract – 18 monthsWorkplace: GENOSCOPE (IBFJ/CEA), Evry, FranceExpected date of employment: April 15th 2024Proportion of work: Full timeDesired level of education: BAC + 2, BTS or DUTApplication deadline: March 15th, 2024Send application to: Janaina Rigonato – jrigonat@genoscope.cns.fr The project: ATLASea is a dedicated program committed
  • ATLASea Recruitment: Research Engineer in software development (M/W)
    Job title: Research Engineer in software development (M/W) Number of positions proposed: 1 Type of contract: Fixed-term contract – 24 months renewable or permanent project contract Workplace: DYOGEN Team, led by Hugues Roest Crollius at Institut de Biologie de l’École Normale SupĂ©rieure (IBENS) in Paris, France Expected date of employment: 1 March 2024 Proportion of work: Full time Remuneration: Between
  • ATLASea Recruitment: Research Engineer – Comparative Genomics workflow development (M/F)
    Job title: Research Engineer – Comparative Genomics workflow development (M/F) Number of positions proposed: 1 Type of contract: Fixed-term contract – 24 months renewable or permanent project contract Workplace: DYOGEN Team, led by Hugues Roest Crollius at Institut de Biologie de l’École Normale SupĂ©rieure (IBENS) in Paris, France Expected date of employment: 1 March 2024 Proportion of work: Full time
  • Full Stack Web Development Engineer – Interoperability (M/W)
    Job Description Field: Biology, Biophysics, and BiochemistryContract: Fixed-term contract (CDD)Job Title: Full Stack Web Development Engineer – Interoperability (M/W)Post Status: ManagerialContract Duration (in months): 36Job Location: Évry, Essonne (91), ĂŽle-de-France, FranceRecommended Education: Bac+5 Master2/EngineerPosition Availability: 03/01/2024 Job Description You will join the development and production management team within the Computer and Scientific Laboratory of CEA/Genoscope, whose main activity is to
  • ATLASea Recruitment: Researcher in bioinformatics and comparative genomics (W/M)
    Bioinformatics Laboratory for Genomics and Biodiversity (Genoscope, CEA) is opening a position for a researcher in bioinformatics and comparative genomics through the funded programme ATLASea “Atlas of marine genomes: from massive data to innovation”. The position is based at Genoscope in Evry, near Paris, France. Environment Genoscope (www.genoscope.cns.fr) was founded in 1996 to contribute to the Human genome project and