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Stabilising the Corneal Stem Cell Niche: LaNt α31 as a Regulator of Epithelial Repair and Regeneration

Funding
Self-funded
Study mode
Full-time
Apply by
Year round
Start date
Year round
Subject area
Biological and Biomedical Sciences

Postgraduate Online Open Event

Meet us online on Wednesday 17 June 2026 to find out more about postgraduate study at the University of Liverpool.

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Overview

Discover how a little known laminin related protein, LaNt α31, shapes the human limbal stem cell niche. Using stem cell models, advanced imaging and engineered tissues, this project investigates how the basement membrane controls epithelial identity and explores new therapeutic strategies for corneal repair and regenerative medicine.

About this opportunity

The front of the eye is constantly exposed to the external environment, yet maintains a clear, stable, and self‑renewing surface throughout life. This remarkable resilience depends on limbal epithelial stem cells (LESCs), which reside in a specialised niche at the corneal periphery. Their ability to remain quiescent, activate for repair, or differentiate into corneal cells is tightly controlled by cues from the extracellular matrix. When this regulation fails, such as in injury, chronic disease, ageing, or stem‑cell deficiency, patients can develop painful erosions, scarring, and vision loss. Understanding how stem‑cell behaviour is instructed by matrix signals is therefore a critical step towards developing new regenerative therapies for the ocular surface.

Recent data from our lab point to a previously overlooked but powerful regulator of the limbal niche: LaNt α31, an alternatively spliced laminin‑derived protein. Our data has shown that LaNt α31 has surprisingly broad effects, it remodels laminin‑332 networks, alters adhesion structures, and shifts epithelial cells towards a more progenitor‑like identity. These findings suggest that LaNt α31 may function as a stem cell “niche stabiliser”, helping to hold stem‑cell‑like cells in place, reinforce their basal identity, and prevent premature differentiation. Yet the mechanisms behind this behaviour remain unknown. This is where your PhD project begins.

In this project, you will investigate how LaNt α31 controls stem‑cell state, basement‑membrane architecture, and epithelial behaviour. Working with human limbal epithelial cells, advanced 3D corneal models, and state‑of‑the‑art super‑resolution imaging, you will map how LaNt α31 coordinates laminin processing, syndecan signalling, and ECM organisation to create a microenvironment that supports stem‑cell maintenance.

Your work will address three key questions:

  1. How does LaNt α31 reshape laminin‑332 architecture in the limbal niche?
    You will use high‑resolution and super‑resolution microscopy to visualise basement‑membrane organisation at nanoscale resolution and determine how LaNt α31 modifies ECM patterning and adhesion structures.
  2. How does LaNt α31 influence stem‑cell identity and differentiation cues?
    We will analyse gene‑expression changes, differentiation markers, and secreted factors to uncover how LaNt α31 drives cells towards a basal, progenitor‑like state and suppresses migration‑associated or repair‑associated pathways.
  3. Can LaNt α31‑dependent mechanisms be harnessed to improve corneal repair?
    Using biomimetic 3D limbal and corneal tissue constructs, you will test how LaNt α31 affects stratification, hemidesmosome formation, barrier integrity, and wound‑closure dynamics. These experiments provide a translational link, offering a path toward developing ECM‑based therapies or conditioning strategies that stabilise the niche in disease or after injury.

By the end of the PhD, you will have developed a unique mechanistic understanding of how the limbal niche is stabilised, contributed new insights into stem‑cell regulation, and created tools or models with clear potential for future therapeutic development.

This project is ideal for students excited by stem‑cell biology, matrix biology, regenerative medicine, and advanced imaging. You will receive training in cell and molecular biology, genome editing, quantitative imaging, ECM analysis, organotypic culture, and corneal biology, supported by a collaborative supervisory team with expertise in laminins, niche biology, and 3D tissue engineering.

Further reading

Find out about the lab at www.lantsandlaminins.com

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Who is this for?

This project is for someone with a background in biology, biological sciences, biochemistry, genetics or related disciplines.

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How to apply

  1. 1. Contact supervisors

    Express your interest by email to khamill@liverpool.ac.uk and we will schedule a time to chat.

    Note this is a not-funded PhD, so please indicate if you have funding secured and/or options for where you/we can apply.

    Supervisors Email address Staff profile URL
    Dr Kevin Hamill khamill@liverpool.ac.uk https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/people/kevin-hamill
    Dr Ceniz Zihni C.Zihni@liverpool.ac.uk https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/people/ceniz-zihni
    Dr Mark Morgan Mark.Morgan@liverpool.ac.uk https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/people/mark-morgan
  2. 2. Prepare your application documents

    You may need the following documents to complete your online application:

    • A research proposal (this should cover the research you’d like to undertake)
    • University transcripts and degree certificates to date
    • Passport details (international applicants only)
    • English language certificates (international applicants only)
    • A personal statement
    • A curriculum vitae (CV)
    • Contact details for two proposed supervisors
    • Names and contact details of two referees.
  3. 3. Apply

    Finally, register and apply online. You'll receive an email acknowledgment once you've submitted your application. We'll be in touch with further details about what happens next.

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Fees and funding

Your tuition fees, funding your studies, and other costs to consider.

Tuition fees

UK fees (applies to Channel Islands, Isle of Man and Republic of Ireland)

Full-time place, per year - £5,238

International fees

Full-time place, per year - £32,200

fees applicable for 2026/27 academic year


Additional costs

We understand that budgeting for your time at university is important, and we want to make sure you understand any costs that are not covered by your tuition fee. This could include buying a laptop, books, or stationery.

Find out more about the additional study costs that may apply to this project, as well as general student living costs.


Funding your PhD

If you're a UK national, or have settled status in the UK, you may be eligible to apply for a Postgraduate Doctoral Loan worth up to £30,301 to help with course fees and living costs.

There’s also a variety of alternative sources of funding. These include funded research opportunities and financial support from UK research councils, charities and trusts. Your supervisor may be able to help you secure funding.


We've set the country or region your qualifications are from as United Kingdom.

Scholarships and bursaries

We offer a range of scholarships and bursaries that could help pay your tuition fees and living expenses.

Duncan Norman Research Scholarship

If you’re awarded this prestigious scholarship, you’ll receive significant funding to support your postgraduate research. This includes full payment of your PhD fees and a cash bursary of £23,000 per year while you study. One award is available in each academic year.

John Lennon Memorial Scholarship

If you’re a UK student, either born in or with strong family connections to Merseyside, you could be eligible to apply for financial support worth up to £12,000 per year for up to three years of full-time postgraduate research (or up to five years part-time pro-rata).

Sport Liverpool Performance Programme

Apply to receive tailored training support to enhance your sporting performance. Our athlete support package includes a range of benefits, from bespoke strength and conditioning training to physiotherapy sessions and one-to-one nutritional advice.

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Contact us

Have a question about this research opportunity or studying a PhD with us? Please get in touch with us, using the contact details below, and we’ll be happy to assist you.

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