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Finding Genius Podcast

Exploring Loops in the Human Genome: Dr. Erez Lieberman Aiden Explains His Research

Finding Genius Podcast

Richard Jacobs

Medicine, Health & Fitness

4.41K Ratings

🗓️ 25 February 2020

⏱️ 36 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Dr. Aiden works on analyzing the bending of our human genome, a 3-D complex arrangement that, in part, regulates our cells.

This conversation explores

  • how each chromatid forms unique loops and bends while patterns emerge across similar cell types,
  • the mechanism that forms these loops—a protein complex that works almost like a lariat knot of a lasso, and
  • why a better understanding of this molecular genetics architecture is important for medical treatments.



Dr. Erez Lieberman Aiden is an assistant professor of molecular and human genetics at Baylor College of Medicine. Over the course of the podcast, he describes how this architectural feat of our cells' genome is formed and the accompanying implications of the nature of this formation.

As he explains the complexity of molecular genetics, he begins with a description of how this two-meter-long DNA strand fits inside each of our nuclei. Further, because the sequencing of the human genome is such a recent scientific accomplishment, our understanding of these bending twists and loops is growing almost daily.

He explains that this intricate packing of the human genome is not just a storage mechanism. Rather, as is the case with proteins, shape is essential to function—these physical loops form and bring enhancer elements in relation to a significant gene, for example. He adds that typically loops bring promoters of genes in contact with other elements in the genome to exchange information. All this gives rise to genetic regulation, which includes turning genes on and off.

Dr. Aiden also explains the practicalities of how these molecular genetics studies are accomplished, such as what microscopy enables them to see. Finally, he discusses some of the implications of this research: scientists ask why we have the same genome in the brain and the heart yet the cells do different jobs. It's clear the gene changes how it folds in different organ systems and that fold changes how each cell functions.

For more, see his lab page at https://www.aidenlab.org/ , which includes links to all the data from their research, and a recent article he published in Scientific American that explores aspects of these themes: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/human-genome-3-d/

Transcript

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0:00.0

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0:02.0

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0:07.0

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0:25.0

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0:30.3

This is the Finding Genius Podcast that is Richard Jacobs.

0:34.0

Hello, this is Richard Jacobs with the Finding Genius Podcast.

0:41.0

This is the Health, Bioscience and Medicine edition. I have Errez Lieberman. He's an assistant professor

0:47.3

at Baylor College of Medicine. And he's working on the human genome. From what I read, it's over six and a half feet long approximately

0:55.6

or two meters, yet it could fold up to tiny, tiny dimensions inside of our cell nuclei.

1:01.9

That has this happened, and what does it look like when it's folded? What does that mean? What can you do with it? And it's folded or semi-folded state? How can you guide it, change it, etc? So it appears that that's what Dr. Lieberman is studying.

1:13.0

So welcome.

1:14.0

Thanks for coming, Dr. Leibman.

1:15.0

How are you doing?

1:16.0

Yeah, I completely agree.

1:17.0

I think it appears that that's what we're studying.

1:19.0

You know, you always have to, in science, be aware of the possibility that what you think you're studying may not be what you're actually studying because your experiment works in some way you didn't fully appreciate or your theory has some feature you didn't quite get but I agree wholeheartedly that it it

1:36.6

appears that what we are studying is is how the human genome folds inside the nucleus

1:40.9

for cell to give people an idea of the scale so I guess you

1:44.7

know it's two meters long but for American listeners that's about six and a half feet.

...

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