Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA BERKELEY
Description
Abstract Text
PROJECT SUMMARY
DNA methylation is important for gene regulation, transcriptional silencing of repetitive DNA and establishing
genomic imprinting. While DNA methylation is a dynamic modification, which is added and removed by writer
and eraser enzymes, it is faithfully inherited over many millions of cell divisions, and even evolutionary
timescales. How these writers and erasers combine to ensure such accurate epigenetic inheritance is a critical
question, as failure to accurately maintain DNA methylation patterns is associated with aging as well as
numerous diseases, including cancers. Despite the importance of DNA methylation writers and erasers, the
mechanisms that regulate and coordinate their genes to maintain epigenetic homeostasis remain poorly
understood. A major goal of the Williams lab is to eliminate this gap in knowledge. Using the epigenetic model
system Arabidopsis, which can tolerate loss-of-function mutations to all methylation writers and erasers, my lab
will perform a comprehensive study of the gene regulatory mechanisms that regulate the expression of writer
and eraser genes to ensure epigenetic homeostasis. This will include performing a mechanistic dissection of
the cell-cycle regulation of genes encoding writer and eraser enzymes and their targeting by anciently
conserved cell cycle transcription factors. Additionally, my lab seeks to identify new trans-acting factors
involved in the regulation of epigenetic homeostasis by studying a naturally occurring strain of Arabidopsis with
drastically different regulation of epigenetic modifiers. Lastly, my lab will precisely define how epigenetic
homeostasis is lost within some cells during aging, identifying mechanisms that contribute to age-dependent
DNA methylation losses, and determining how “epigenetic age” is influenced by organ regeneration and the
environment. Together, these approaches will generate multiple insights into how DNA methylation dynamics
are established at a cellular scale and coordinated to achieve epigenetic homeostasis. We anticipate that these
findings will provide new insights into the laws of epigenetic stability and inheritance, which are crucial for
understanding many aspects of the health of human cells.
Public Health Relevance Statement
PROJECT NARRATIVE
Disruption of the enzymes that write and erase DNA methylation is associated with numerous diseases,
including cancers. Despite their fundamental importance, the genetic mechanisms that regulate methylation
writer and eraser genes during development remain poorly understood. We will uncover the mechanisms that
regulate writer and eraser genes over the cell cycle and during tissue and organ development, as well as
during tissue aging.
No Sub Projects information available for 1R35GM154941-01
Publications
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Outcomes
The Project Outcomes shown here are displayed verbatim as submitted by the Principal Investigator (PI) for this award. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed are those of the PI and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Institutes of Health. NIH has not endorsed the content below.
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