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Professor Job Dekker – University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School

23/09/2024 1:00 pm - 23/09/2024 2:00 pm
Location
Davis Auditorium

WEHI Special Immunology Seminar hosted by Associate Professor Rhys Allan
 

Professor Job Dekker

Department of Systems Biology, University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School

 

Mechanisms of Chromosome Folding

 

Davis Auditorium
Join via TEAMS
Including Q&A session

 

Job Dekker received his undergraduate and graduate training at Utrecht University in The Netherlands. As a post-doctoral fellow in the laboratory of Nancy Kleckner at Harvard University, he developed chromosome conformation capture methodology. He is currently an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Professor in the Department of Systems Biology at the University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School. His laboratory studies how genomes are folded in three dimensions. His work has led to insights into the formation of chromatin loops involved in long-range gene regulation, the organization of the interphase nucleus, the structure of metaphase chromosomes, and general folding principles of genomes. His group pioneered the use of genome folding data for genome assembly. Recently, his lab started exploring chromosome folding mechanisms in organisms with unusual genome organizations, such as dinoflagellates.

 

All welcome!

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