Dr. Dennis Nagl

Angestellt, Field Automation Specialist, Hamilton Germany GmbH

Abschluss: Doktor, LMU Munich

Munich, Deutschland

Über mich

I am a highly motivated scientist and automation expert with hands-on experience in laboratory automation and different biomedical research fields. During my doctoral thesis at the LMU Munich (Gene Center), I gained in-depth knowledge about cell culture (primary cells and cell lines), CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing, and immunology with a strong focus on innate immunology and macrophages. During my research, I learned and mastered several biochemical, immunological, and molecular-biological methods. My strong background in several biomedical fields, my knowledge of laboratory automation, and my broad method knowledge, prepared me for my current position as Field Automation Specialist at Hamilton. In this role, I am programming and implementing automated liquid-handling robots for different biological settings. Moreover, I am also responsible for project and customer management. I am looking forward to use my skillset to advance research and diagnostics with laboratory automation.

Fähigkeiten und Kenntnisse

Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Biochemistry
Programming
R
MatLab
Biology
Cell Biology
Molecular biology
Python
Cell Culture Technology
Western Blot
PCR
ELISA
Virology
Adobe Illustrator
Automated Liquid Handling Systems
FACS Analysis
Statistics
Biotechnologie
Chemie
Customer service
Programming
Project Management
Automatisierung
Projektmanagement

Werdegang

Berufserfahrung von Dennis Nagl

  • Bis heute 2 Jahre und 1 Monat, seit Mai 2022

    Field Automation Specialist

    Hamilton Germany GmbH

  • 4 Monate, Jan. 2022 - Apr. 2022

    Scientist

    Dynamic Biosensors GmbH
  • 6 Monate, Juli 2021 - Dez. 2021

    Postdoctoral Researcher

    LMU-München

Ausbildung von Dennis Nagl

  • 4 Jahre und 2 Monate, Mai 2017 - Juni 2021

    Biochemistry and Immunology

    LMU Munich

    QBM Graduate school (scholarship holder 2016 - 2017) Hornung Lab - Innate immunity Topic: DNA damage induced type I Interferon signalling in human macrophages.

  • 2 Jahre und 5 Monate, Okt. 2014 - Feb. 2017

    Biochemistry

    Universität Regensburg

    Master thesis: Analysis and further clarification of the DNA damage response pathways in the induction of antiviral immune responses. (Veit Hornung Lab, LMU Munich) Research stay in Newcastle upon Tyne (6 months)

  • 2 Jahre und 11 Monate, Okt. 2011 - Aug. 2014

    Biochemistry

    Universität Regensburg

    Bachelor thesis: Functional analysis of potential phosphorylation sites of human Argonaute proteins. (Gunther Meister Lab)

Sprachen

  • Deutsch

    Muttersprache

  • Englisch

    Fließend

  • Französisch

    Grundlagen

21 Mio. XING Mitglieder, von A bis Z