基本信息
views: 22

Bio
Signals are transmitted to chromatin to facilitate rapid, robust, and selective gene expression within the three billion base-pair genome in response to environmental cues, such as pathogen sensing. The goal of our ongoing research is to reveal mechanisms allowing for this scope and selectivity, and to understand them in the context of dynamic and fluid chromatin and all of its constituents.
We have found that kinases downstream of environmental signaling pathways activate both transcription factors and histones in chromatin to synergistically drive rapid, high-level transcription of stimulation induced genes. These "signaling to chromatin" pathways are notable in their broad utilization in diverse rapid cellular responses, and also by their constitutive activation (potential requirement?) in many cancers and inflammatory disease. A central hypothesis is that there exists a class of dedicated epigenetic mechanisms, histone modifications, and regulatory factors specific for selective stimulation-induced transcription to drive de novo, high-level gene expression even while 1000s of other genes are constitutively expressed. These mechanisms critically enable rapid, tailored cellular responses but may be dysregulated in disease.
(2) MOUSE MODELS FOR FUNCTIONAL HISTONE GENETICS
Despite widely held assumptions and abundant descriptive data, we lack an understanding of the function of histone modifications in complex organisms, i.e. deuterostomes, vertebrates. This is due to the experimental intractability of histone genetic complexity. A motivating challenge for the lab has been to address this fundamental gap in the field of epigenetics, which is central to understanding how large genomes in complex organisms are regulated to direct cellular differentiation and rapid environmental responses across physiologic systems and their dysregulation in disease. We are building a platform for functional histone studies in mammalian systems. With these approaches, we set out to address fundamental questions: What are the roles of histones and their modification in mammalian cell differentiation in vivo? Do individual histone residues and their modification have cell type-specific effects, instruct cell fate, or direct malignancy? Are some essential for all cell types?
A long term goal is to apply mechanistic knowledge of epigenetic regulation and functional histone genetic tools to understand epigenetic processes in immune cell development and function including immunologic memory, trained immunity, immune cell exhaustion, and more.
We have found that kinases downstream of environmental signaling pathways activate both transcription factors and histones in chromatin to synergistically drive rapid, high-level transcription of stimulation induced genes. These "signaling to chromatin" pathways are notable in their broad utilization in diverse rapid cellular responses, and also by their constitutive activation (potential requirement?) in many cancers and inflammatory disease. A central hypothesis is that there exists a class of dedicated epigenetic mechanisms, histone modifications, and regulatory factors specific for selective stimulation-induced transcription to drive de novo, high-level gene expression even while 1000s of other genes are constitutively expressed. These mechanisms critically enable rapid, tailored cellular responses but may be dysregulated in disease.
(2) MOUSE MODELS FOR FUNCTIONAL HISTONE GENETICS
Despite widely held assumptions and abundant descriptive data, we lack an understanding of the function of histone modifications in complex organisms, i.e. deuterostomes, vertebrates. This is due to the experimental intractability of histone genetic complexity. A motivating challenge for the lab has been to address this fundamental gap in the field of epigenetics, which is central to understanding how large genomes in complex organisms are regulated to direct cellular differentiation and rapid environmental responses across physiologic systems and their dysregulation in disease. We are building a platform for functional histone studies in mammalian systems. With these approaches, we set out to address fundamental questions: What are the roles of histones and their modification in mammalian cell differentiation in vivo? Do individual histone residues and their modification have cell type-specific effects, instruct cell fate, or direct malignancy? Are some essential for all cell types?
A long term goal is to apply mechanistic knowledge of epigenetic regulation and functional histone genetic tools to understand epigenetic processes in immune cell development and function including immunologic memory, trained immunity, immune cell exhaustion, and more.
Research Interests
Papers共 50 篇Author StatisticsCo-AuthorSimilar Experts
By YearBy Citation主题筛选期刊级别筛选合作者筛选合作机构筛选
时间
引用量
主题
期刊级别
合作者
合作机构
Juliana J Lee, Liang Yang, Jonathan J Kotzin,Dughan Ahimovic,Michael J Bale,Peter A Nigrovic,Steven Z Josefowicz,Diane Mathis,Christophe Benoist, Immunological Genome Project Consortium
The Journal of experimental medicineno. 4 (2025)
Dorsa Toghani, Sanika Gupte,Sharon Zeng,Elmir Mahammadov, Edie I. Crosse,Negar Seyedhassantehrani,Christian Burns,David Gravano,Stefan Radtke,Hans-Peter Kiem,Sonia Rodriguez,Nadia Carlesso,Amogh Pradeep, Alexis Georgiades, Fabienne Lucas,Nicola K. Wilson,Sarah J. Kinston,Berthold Göttgens,Le Zong,Isabel Beerman,Bongsoo Park, Derek H. Janssens, Daniel Jones, Ali Toghani,Claus Nerlov,Eric M. Pietras,Marion Mesnieres,Christa Maes,Atsushi Kumanogoh,Thomas Worzfeld,Jin-Gyu Cheong,Steven Z. Josefowicz,Peter Kharchenko,David T. Scadden,Antonio Scialdone,Joel A. Spencer,Lev Silberstein
Nature Agingpp.1-18, (2025)
Victoria da Silva-Diz,Amartya Singh,Maya Aleksandrova, Oekyung Kim, Christopher Thai,Olga Lancho, Patricia Renck Nunes,Hayley Affronti,Alexia Martínez de Paz,Steven Z. Josefowicz,Xiaoyang Su,Kathryn E. Wellen,Daniel Herranz
Blood Neoplasiapp.100069, (2025)
Duygu Ucar,Asa Thibodeau,Asuncion Mejias,Djamel Nehar-Belaid,Radu Marches,Zhaohui Xu, Giray Eryilmaz,Steven Josefowicz, Silke Paust,Virginia Pascual,Jacques Banchereau,Octavio Ramilo
Research square (2025)
Tomer Itkin,Sean Houghton,Ryan Schreiner, Yang Lin,Chaitanya R Badwe,Veronique Voisin,Alex Murison,Negar Seyedhassantehrani,Kerstin B Kaufmann,Laura Garcia-Prat,Gregory T Booth,Fuqiang Geng,Ying Liu,Jesus M Gomez-Salinero,Jae-Hung Shieh,David Redmond,Jenny Z Xiang,Steven Z Josefowicz,Cole Trapnell,Eric M Pietras,Joel A Spencer,Ross Levine,Wenbin Xiao,Lior Zangi,Brandon Hadland,John E Dick,Stephanie Z Xie,Shahin Rafii
Nature immunologyno. 3 (2025): 378-390
Immunological Reviews (2024)
Silvia Sarmento Pires, Wei Yang, Cynthia Loius,Nancy Tran,Mina Hassan-Zahraee,Zhan Ye,Craig Hyde,Kenneth Hung, Charles Ng, Alexander Grier, Lucy Paddock, Jin Cheing,Stephan Targan, Rachel Niec,Steven Josefowicz,Lukas Dow
JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGYno. 1 (2024)
Pedro H. V. Saavedra,Alissa J. Trzeciak, Allie Lipshutz,Andrew W. Daman,Anya J. O'Neal, Zong-Lin Liu,Zhaoquan Wang,Jesus E. Romero-Pichardo,Waleska Saitz Rojas,Giulia Zago,Marcel R. M. van den Brink,Steven Z. Josefowicz,Christopher D. Lucas,Christopher J. Anderson,Alexander Y. Rudensky,Justin S. A. Perry
NATURE METABOLISMno. 9 (2024)
Load More
Author Statistics
#Papers: 50
#Citation: 9087
H-Index: 20
G-Index: 31
Sociability: 6
Diversity: 2
Activity: 76
Co-Author
Co-Institution
D-Core
- 合作者
- 学生
- 导师
Data Disclaimer
The page data are from open Internet sources, cooperative publishers and automatic analysis results through AI technology. We do not make any commitments and guarantees for the validity, accuracy, correctness, reliability, completeness and timeliness of the page data. If you have any questions, please contact us by email: report@aminer.cn