Richard Joh
Gene clustering drives the transcriptional coherence of disparate biological processes in eukaryotes
Abstract:
The establishment of distinct transcriptional states entails coordinated transcriptional coregulation of several disparate biological processes (BP), involving thousands of genes scattered throughout the genome. Linear clustering of genes in a single BP is one strategy for their transcriptional coregulation. However, whether such gene clustering also plays a role in transcriptional coherence of several disparate BPs remains unexplored. Here, by analyzing the genomes of eukaryotes ranging from yeast to plants to human, we report the identification of thousands of conserved and species-specific disparate clustered BP pairs, many of which in normal human tissues are transcriptionally correlated. Strikingly, our results reveal that often this system-level transcriptional coordination is achieved in part by the genic proximity of regulatory nodes of disparate BPs whose coregulation drives the transcriptional coherence of their respective pathways. This, we hypothesize, is one strategy for creating coregulated, tunable modulons in eukaryotes.
Speaker: Richard Joh, Virginia Commonwealth University
Dr. Joh, originally from Korea, received his bachelor's degree from Seoul National University and his Ph.D. at Georgia Tech (PhD advisor: Joshua Weitz). He was a postdoc at MIT and Mass General Hospital before joining VCU. At VCU, his research is focused on genome organization and the physics of cancer.
Host: Joshua Weitz
Seminars start at 4:00 pm, and refreshments will be served at 3:45 pm. All seminars are held in the Conference Room (1116) of the Institute for Physical Science and Technology (IPST) Building (Bldg #085) unless otherwise noted.