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Jessica Tyler

Professor of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine.

Our goal is to discover and understand the mechanistic basis of epigenetic regulation of aging, genomic integrity and gene expression. The most fundamental level of epigenetic regulation is provided by the packaging of our DNA together with histone proteins to make chromatin, and the opposite process of removal of histones from the DNA. These chromatin assembly and disassembly processes physically block or permit, respectively, access of the cellular machinery to the genetic information carried by our DNA, thereby playing a critical role in controlling all genomic processes. We focus on understanding how chromatin is disassembled and reassembled by histone chaperone proteins, ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling machines and post-translational modifications of the globular domains of the core histones, in order to discover new mechanisms whereby chromatin regulates aging, gene expression and genomic integrity. Our studies use a combination of molecular genetics in budding yeast, tissue culture studies, biochemistry and biophysical approaches.

Visit website: http://vivo.med.cornell.edu/display/cwid-jet2021

See also: Academia Weill Cornell Medicine - Biomedical research unit and medical school of Cornell University.

Details last updated 11-Mar-2020

Jessica Tyler is also referenced in the following:

Undoing Aging 2022 CANCELLED

26-May-2022 to 28-May-2022

Focused on the cellular and molecular repair of age-related damage (Berlin)