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Microbial Engineering Jobs (NOW HIRING)

The Fermentation Engineer supports the development, optimization, and scale-up of microbial fermentation processes for industrial biotechnology applications. This role involves executing lab- and ...

The Fermentation Engineer supports the development, optimization, and scale-up of microbial fermentation processes for industrial biotechnology applications. This role involves executing lab- and ...

The Fermentation Engineer supports the development, optimization, and scale-up of microbial fermentation processes for industrial biotechnology applications. This role involves executing lab- and ...

... microbial contamination, while simultaneously moderating the sensory profile of alternative ... The Director of Engineering will be directly involved in design and build activities while scaling ...

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Microbial Engineering information

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How much do microbial engineering jobs pay per hour?

As of Jun 23, 2026, the average hourly pay for microbial engineering in the United States is $65.95, according to ZipRecruiter salary data. Most workers in this role earn between $56.49 and $77.40 per hour, depending on experience, location, and employer.

What are the key skills and qualifications needed to thrive as a Microbial Engineer, and why are they important?

To thrive as a Microbial Engineer, you need a solid background in microbiology, biochemistry, and genetic engineering, often supported by a degree in biological sciences or bioengineering. Familiarity with laboratory techniques, bioinformatics tools, and bioprocessing equipment, as well as certifications in biosafety or Good Laboratory Practice (GLP), are typically used. Strong problem-solving, project management, and collaboration skills help individuals stand out in this interdisciplinary field. These skills and qualities are essential for optimizing microbial processes, ensuring regulatory compliance, and driving innovation in biotechnology applications.

What is microbial engineering?

Microbial engineering is a branch of biotechnology that involves manipulating microorganisms, such as bacteria, yeast, or fungi, to perform specific tasks or produce valuable products. This field combines principles of microbiology, molecular biology, genetics, and chemical engineering to design and optimize microbes for applications like pharmaceuticals, biofuels, agriculture, and environmental remediation. Microbial engineers work on improving the efficiency, yield, and safety of microbial processes to solve real-world problems. The work may involve genetic modification, metabolic pathway engineering, fermentation technology, and bioprocess scale-up.

What is the difference between Microbial Engineering vs Microbiologist?

AspectMicrobial EngineeringMicrobiologist
Required CredentialsBachelor's or higher in microbiology, bioengineering, or related fields; often includes engineering certificationsBachelor's or higher in microbiology, biology, or related fields; research-focused
Work EnvironmentIndustrial labs, biotech companies, manufacturing facilitiesResearch labs, academic institutions, healthcare settings
Employer & Industry UsageBiotech, pharmaceuticals, environmental engineeringResearch institutions, healthcare, academia
Common Search & Comparison IntentUnderstanding roles in biotech and engineering contextsResearch, diagnostics, microbiology studies

Microbial Engineering focuses on designing and applying microbes for industrial processes, often requiring engineering skills. Microbiologists primarily conduct research and diagnostics related to microbes. While both roles involve microbiology knowledge, Microbial Engineering emphasizes application in industry, whereas Microbiologists focus on scientific study and analysis.

How do microbial engineers typically collaborate with other scientific and engineering disciplines in a research or industrial setting?

Microbial engineers frequently work alongside biochemists, chemical engineers, and bioinformaticians to design, optimize, and scale microbial processes. Collaboration often involves regular team meetings, cross-functional project planning, and shared laboratory or pilot plant workspaces. Effective communication is key, as microbial engineers must translate complex biological data into actionable engineering strategies and ensure alignment with regulatory or production goals. This multidisciplinary teamwork not only accelerates innovation but also provides valuable learning and growth opportunities for those in the role.
Infographic showing various Microbial Engineering job openings in the United States as of June 2026, with employment types broken down into 83% Full Time, 6% Temporary, and 11% Contract. Highlights an 94% In-person, and 6% Remote job distribution, with an average salary of $137,183 per year, or $66 per hour.
Postdoctoral Researcher (Co-evolution)

Postdoctoral Researcher (Co-evolution)

University of Mississippi

Oxford, MS • On-site

$62K/yr

Other

Medical, Life, Retirement

This job post has expired today. Applications are no longer accepted.


University Of Mississippi rating

8.0

Company rating: 8.0 out of 10

Based on 16 frontline employees who took The Breakroom Quiz

151st of 539 rated colleges and universities


Job description

Postdoctoral Research Associate: Experimental Co-Evolution of Microbial Mutualisms


The Hom Lab at the University of Mississippi (UM) is recruiting a postdoctoral researcher to further develop a model experimental system for observing microbial mutualisms evolve in real time. Funded by a new NSF award and connected to an ongoing collaboration with the Kryazhimskiy Lab at UC-San Diego, this project uses synthetic microbial communities, custom strain engineering, lineage tracking, and long-term experimental evolution to ask how cooperative species interactions originate, stabilize, diversify, and fail.


The work will build on the study by Venkataram et al. (2023) Nat Ecol Evol 7:143–154 and the synthetic mutualism created in the Hom Lab between Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The postdoctoral associate will extend this system to dissect how microbial ecosystems co-evolve under controlled laboratory conditions.


We are particularly interested in recruiting someone who wants intellectual ownership. Our NSF project provides a strong experimental foundation, but the postdoctoral associate will also have substantial freedom to pursue new questions that align with the lab’s broader mission to understand how biotic and abiotic factors shape the formation, persistence, and evolution of species interactions, especially symbioses and mutualisms. More about the lab can be found at https://darwinsdaemon.com.


The postdoctoral associate will lead experiments, publish first-author papers, present at national and international meetings, and develop toward an independent scientific career. They will also have opportunities to mentor graduate, undergraduate, and high-school students (e.g., through the ARISE@UM program), and to help develop a course-based undergraduate research module associated with the NSF award. For many students in our geographical region, where research opportunities are scarce, this may be their first real opportunity to find out what research is like, and a big reason why our lab takes outreach as seriously as the science.


What we are looking for:

Applicants should have a Ph.D. by the time of appointment in molecular biology, molecular genetics, synthetic biology, microbiology, evolutionary biology, or a related field.


We do not expect any one candidate to have all the skills below, but strong candidates will bring deep expertise in at least one relevant area and a clear appetite to learn the others; competitive applicants will have some combination of:

  • Strong wet-lab expertise in molecular genetics, genetic engineering, synthetic biology, microbial genetics, or a related area
  • A working knowledge of evolutionary biology, population genetics, microbial ecology, and/or experimental evolution
  • Experience constructing, validating, maintaining, and analyzing engineered microbial strains. Experience with Chlamydomonas and/or budding yeast is a plus
  • A record of scientific productivity, such as peer-reviewed publications, preprints, or manuscripts in preparation
  • Strong scientific writing and communication skills
  • Evidence of ownership and follow-through on complex research projects
  • Interest in mentoring junior scientists and contributing to a collaborative lab culture


Experience with genome sequencing, lineage tracking, barcode sequencing, population-genomic analysis, high-throughput phenotyping, natural products, biosynthetic gene clusters, metabolomics, and/or mass spectrometry would be welcome but is not required.


Environment and support

The Hom Lab is based at UM’s Insight Park Innovation Hub, a building that houses academic labs, startups, businesses, UM’s office of commercialization, and state/regional offices for economic development.


Oxford, Mississippi is a lively college town with a vibrant collegiate sports culture, a celebrated literary and music scene, excellent food, and a cost of living that compares favorably with many major US research hubs. It can genuinely be a good place to do hard science and still have a life.


The position is funded for 2.5 years at $62,000 per year, with full health and retirement benefits.


To apply:


Please submit:

  1. a cover letter describing your fit and interest
  2. a CV
  3. contact information for at least three references


Optional supporting materials, such as preprints or manuscripts in preparation, are welcome. Applications on LinkedIn should be followed up with a submission of your materials to the email below.


Questions and application materials should be sent to homlab.postdoc26@protonmail.com with the subject line "Postdoc26 – Coevolution".


Review of applications begins immediately and will continue until the position is filled.


We warmly welcome applications from women and others underrepresented in the sciences. The University of Mississippi is an equal-opportunity employer.


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