Date and time
-
Location

Monadnock Seminar Room, Broad Institute and Zoom (see below for information)

Transposable elements and the regulatory logic of hematopoietic differentiation

The temporal regulation of gene expression by transcription factors, chromatin modifiers and cis-regulatory elements is central to establish cellular identity and function. Understanding this regulatory logic is critical for deriving select cell types in vitro for translational applications. The human hematopoietic system has long been a model system and an important source for adoptive cell therapies, yet our understanding of the regulatory mechanisms that elicit commitment toward distinct hematopoietic lineages is continuously evolving.

In this thesis, I describe several studies on transposable elements (TEs) as natural and engineered sources of regulatory innovation that contribute to, and aid in the investigation of, dynamic cellular processes. Toward this end, I built comprehensive genome-wide enhancer-gene maps spanning the human hematopoietic system and identified that TEs in the human genome contribute to the transcriptional networks regulating lymphoid cells. De-repression of TEs in hematopoietic stem cells, enacted via modulation of TE chromatin silencing machinery, facilitates the development of natural killer (NK) cells during lymphoid differentiation. Specifically, knockout of the H3K9 methyltransferase EHMT1 or transcriptional co-repressor TRIM28 induced NK-fated progenitors that ultimately generated NK cells with diverse effector properties. We further leveraged TEs by repurposing the packaging function of the MLV gag polyprotein to create a non-destructive reporter of the transcriptional states of living cells, enabling the measurement of dynamic transcriptional processes. Through engineering and scientific inquiry, I established the utility of TEs as synthetic biology tools, furthering our understanding of hematopoietic lineage decisions and highlighting that modulation of TEs can be enabling for hematopoietic cell engineering.

Thesis Supervisors:
George Q. Daley, MD, PhD
Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, Caroline Shields Walker Professor of Medicine, HMS

Paul C. Blainey, PhD
Associate Professor of Biological Engineering, MIT

Thesis Committee Chair:
James J. Collins, PhD
Termeer Professor of Medical Engineering and Science, MIT

Thesis Reader:
George Church, PhD
Robert Winthrop Professor of Genetics, HMS

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Zoom invitation – 

Mohamad Ali Najia is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.

Topic: Mohamad Ali Najia PhD Thesis Defense
Time: Thursday, November 10, 2022 02:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)

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