Epigenetics plays an important role in cancer development and progression. Cancer cells hijack the epigenome by modifying the histone protein units responsible for packaging DNA, or by modifying the DNA itself, resulting in changes to chromatin topology and transcriptional programming within the cell. In this thesis, I report our investigation to uncover the mechanisms of epigenetic regulation and how epigenetic control of transcriptional programming goes awry in cancer. We investigate these processes in two separate contexts. In our first study, we investigate the mechanisms by which EZH2 oncogenic mutations alter structure and function of topologically associating domains in non-Hodgkin lymphoma. The process of chromatin folding leads to ...
Aberrant gene function and altered patterns of gene expression are key features of cancer. Growing e...
Misexpression of chromatin modification factors and changed epigenetic modifications play crucial ro...
Gene regulatory networks determine cellular identity. In cancer, aberrations of gene networks are ca...
Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) development is driven by the accumulations of multiple genetic, epigeneti...
Cancer progression is driven by cumulative changes that promote and maintain the malignant phenotype...
Chromatin is organized into topologically associating domains (TADs) enriched in distinct histone ma...
Chromatin is organized into topologically associating domains (TADs) enriched in distinct histone ma...
The epigenomic era has revealed a well-connected network of molecular processes that shape the chrom...
The correlation between epigenetic aberrations and disease underscores the importance of epigenetic ...
The epigenetic regulation of DNA-templated processes has been intensely studied over the last 15 yea...
Compared to the normal tissues, cancer cells tend to have higher proliferation rate and often lost t...
AbstractThe complexity of the mammalian genome is regulated by heritable epigenetic mechanisms, whic...
Spatiotemporal regulation of gene expression governs cellular development and malignant transformati...
In recent years, technological advances have enabled a detailed landscaping of the epigenome and the...
Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) is the 6th most common cancer worldwide and is associa...
Aberrant gene function and altered patterns of gene expression are key features of cancer. Growing e...
Misexpression of chromatin modification factors and changed epigenetic modifications play crucial ro...
Gene regulatory networks determine cellular identity. In cancer, aberrations of gene networks are ca...
Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) development is driven by the accumulations of multiple genetic, epigeneti...
Cancer progression is driven by cumulative changes that promote and maintain the malignant phenotype...
Chromatin is organized into topologically associating domains (TADs) enriched in distinct histone ma...
Chromatin is organized into topologically associating domains (TADs) enriched in distinct histone ma...
The epigenomic era has revealed a well-connected network of molecular processes that shape the chrom...
The correlation between epigenetic aberrations and disease underscores the importance of epigenetic ...
The epigenetic regulation of DNA-templated processes has been intensely studied over the last 15 yea...
Compared to the normal tissues, cancer cells tend to have higher proliferation rate and often lost t...
AbstractThe complexity of the mammalian genome is regulated by heritable epigenetic mechanisms, whic...
Spatiotemporal regulation of gene expression governs cellular development and malignant transformati...
In recent years, technological advances have enabled a detailed landscaping of the epigenome and the...
Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) is the 6th most common cancer worldwide and is associa...
Aberrant gene function and altered patterns of gene expression are key features of cancer. Growing e...
Misexpression of chromatin modification factors and changed epigenetic modifications play crucial ro...
Gene regulatory networks determine cellular identity. In cancer, aberrations of gene networks are ca...