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Towards a quantitative understanding of long-range transcriptional regulation

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This talk will take place online via Zoom & Kings Hedges Room

In mammals, the control of gene expression relies on tens of thousands of enhancer sequences that are differentially active in every cell type. Enhancers engage with target promoters often from large genomic distances and govern their spatio-temporal and quantitative expression dynamics. Genetic variation within these noncoding regions is a major driver of evolution, but is also causal to developmental disorders and numerous human diseases. Despite their central role in gene regulation in health and disease, however, the principles by which enhancers select and control their target genes remain largely unknown. What are the molecular mechanisms that transmit regulatory information from an enhancer to a promoter? How are they related to chromosome structure and physical interactions between enhancers and promoters? Are these mechanisms universal or rather depend on locus- and tissue-specific contexts? My group addresses these fundamental questions at the interface of molecular biology and biophysics using a tight interplay of experimental and theoretical approaches. In my talk, I will present how using a combination of genomic engineering, physical modeling and live-cell imaging we recently discovered that a promoter’s transcription level are a nonlinear function its contact probabilities with a cognate enhancer, and how this could arise from dynamic and unstable physical interactions between enhancers and promoters.

After studying physics, Luca obtained his PhD in Gioacchino Natoli’s lab at the European Institute of Oncology in Milan working on the molecular mechanisms underlying the inflammatory transcriptional response. He then moved to Paris for a postdoc with Edith Heard at the Curie Institute. There he participated to the discovery and characterization of topologically associating domains (TADs), and described the three-dimensional conformation of the inactive X chromosome. Luca has been a group leader at the Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research (FMI) in Basel since 2015. His group uses approaches at the interface between molecular biology and physics to understand the mechanisms by which chromosome structure and dynamics control transcriptional regulation by enhancers. He is the recipient of an ERC Starting Grant and an EMBO Young Investigator.

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This talk is part of the Babraham Seminar series.

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