Swedish national biomedical research center with computational genomics focus
SciLifeLab is a government-appointed research center across six Swedish sites running computationally intensive molecular biology pipelines. The tech stack—R, Python, Nextflow, Snakemake, SLURM—reveals a heavy investment in bioinformatics infrastructure for genomic and structural analysis. Active hiring is research-led (15 roles), with small pockets of data (3) and engineering (1) support, suggesting the organization is scaling scientific capacity faster than platform infrastructure.
Notable leadership hires: Technical chief
SciLifeLab is Sweden's national center for molecular biosciences, established in 2010 and designated a national center by the Swedish government in 2013. The organization operates six sites—two in Stockholm and Uppsala, plus Lund, Gothenburg, Linköping, and Umeå (added in 2021)—and spans 501–1,000 employees. Core research areas include cryo-EM reconstruction, single-cell tumor analysis, lipid nanoparticle vaccine characterization, and data-driven developmental biology. The center also manages large-scale research data infrastructure and participates in international research consortia. Current challenges include scaling computational tooling and integrating data science capabilities across the organization.
Primary languages are R and Python. The organization also uses Nextflow and Snakemake for bioinformatics workflows, plus Bash, C/C++, and Rust for systems-level work. SLURM manages high-performance compute clusters.
Active projects include cryo-EM structure reconstruction, single-cell analysis of tumor evolution, stability and screening of lipid nanoparticles for vaccines, and the AIDA data hub platform. The organization is also leading international research consortia and developing computational tools for cancer resistance research.
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