University of Massachusetts Medical School

Research Lab Tech I

Minimum Salary US-MA-Worcester
Job Location 2 weeks ago(2/17/2026 11:53 AM)
Requisition Number
2026-49185
# of Openings
1
Posted Date
Day
Shift
Non Exempt
Exempt/Non-Exempt Status
Union Position-W28-SHARE
Position Type
Full-Time
Min
USD $36,753.60/Yr.
Max
USD $45,094.40/Yr.

Overview

GENERAL SUMMARY OF POSITION: 

Under the supervision of the Principal Investigator or designee, the Research Laboratory Technician I, performs a variety of specimen preparatory techniques, dry lab data collection, and routine laboratory maintenance.

 

 

Responsibilities

MAJOR RESPONSIBILITIES:

  • Perform a variety of laboratory experiments using both routine and special techniques and methods
  • Assist in more complex laboratory tasks
  • Collect, analyze, and process laboratory samples
  • Record results, organize data, and perform basic computations
  • Maintain laboratory supplies and equipment
  • Comply with all safety and infection control standards
  • Perform other duties as required.

 

 

Qualifications

REQUIRED QUALIFICATIONS:  

  • Bachelor’s degree in Biological Science or equivalent experience
  • Knowledge of Microsoft Office products
  • Ability to perform duties independently
  • Judgment and action skills required to solve commonly encountered problems

SUPERVISION RECEIVED:

Under the supervision of the Principal Investigator or designee

 

SUPERVISION EXERCISED: 

None

 

ENVIRONMENTAL WORKING CONDITIONS:

Wet chemistry laboratory, and may require appropriate contact with biohazards, radionucleotides, toxins, animals, and human specimens. 

Additional Information

The Rothstein laboratory studies the regulation of lymphocyte activation and function, focusing on the role of autoantigens in systemic autoimmune diseases and how low-affinity autoreactive B cells are activated by engaging B cell receptors and Toll-like receptors (TLR7/9). Research also examines the dual role of Fas-ligand in regulating T cells and promoting inflammation and uses pseudo-GVHD animal models to understand antigen-dependent disease triggers and identify profibrotic CD8 T cell subsets in pulmonary fibrosis. More information is available on the Rothstein laboratory website.

Options

Sorry the Share function is not working properly at this moment. Please refresh the page and try again later.
Share on your newsfeed