In this episode of the Epigenetics Podcast, we talked with Sam Buckberry from the Telethon Kids Institute about his work on gene imprinting, sex-biased gene expression, DNA regulatory landscapes, and genomics in the indigenous population of Australia.
Sam Buckberry's research career started with working on the imprinting of H19, IGF2, and IGF2R genes in the placenta. We talk about the controversy surrounding the imprinting of IGF2R and how his study used pyrosequencing to quantify gene expression. We also discuss Sam's work on sex-biased gene expression in the placenta and the identification of a cluster of genes related to placental development and pregnancy.
In addition, we talk about Sam's research on reprogramming and the characterization of DNA regulatory landscapes during the process. We discuss the challenges of working with sequencing data, the discovery of epigenetic memories, and erasing them during reprogramming. Towards the end of the conversation, Sam mentions his current work in setting up an epigenetics group focused on indigenous genomics. They are conducting a large-scale, multi-omics study on cardiometabolic conditions in samples from indigenous Australian communities, with the goal of identifying biomarkers and better understanding the molecular basis of these conditions.
References
-
Buckberry, S., Liu, X., Poppe, D. et al. Transient naive reprogramming corrects hiPS cells functionally and epigenetically. Nature 620, 863–872 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06424-7
-
Knaupp AS1, Buckberry S1, Pflueger J, Lim SM, Ford E, Larcombe MR, Rossello FJ, de Mendoza A, Alaei S, Firas J, Holmes ML, Nair SS, Clark SJ, Nefzger CM, Lister R and Polo JM (2017). Transient and permanent reconfiguration of chromatin and transcription factor occupancy drive reprogramming. Cell Stem Cell 21, 1-12 1 Co-first author
Related Episodes
Comments (0)
To leave or reply to comments, please download free Podbean or
No Comments
To leave or reply to comments,
please download free Podbean App.