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INFORMATION FOR

    Nuclear Structure, Dynamics, & Integrity - The LusKing Lab at Yale School of Medicine

    December 12, 2025
    ID
    13703

    Transcript

    • 00:05- The nucleus is really
    • 00:07the command center of all the cells in our body.
    • 00:10It houses and ultimately protects
    • 00:13the genetic code of all our cells
    • 00:16and so that protection is actually afforded
    • 00:19by this really unique membrane system that we call the nuclear envelope.
    • 00:24- Because the nucleus is such an integrator of signals,
    • 00:28we really need to think about how is that integration
    • 00:31happening to maintain health and how is it altered in disease?
    • 00:39I think for us, we're particularly interested
    • 00:42in the relationship between the integrity of the nucleus
    • 00:46and the integrity of the genome itself,
    • 00:48and thinking about this crosstalk between
    • 00:51how cells are actually surveilling, whether the nucleus is functioning well
    • 00:57and how that ultimately can impinge on the genome.
    • 01:01- We're a fundamental biology lab, so we're very interested in understanding
    • 01:06what we would call fundamental molecular mechanisms
    • 01:09that control how the nucleus works
    • 01:12and I think once we're armed with this knowledge, we're in a very strong position
    • 01:17to be able to understand what happens in different disease states.
    • 01:24- So really take a very interdisciplinary approach.
    • 01:28It's one of the things we really love about being at Yale
    • 01:32and embedded in the Yale School of Medicine.
    • 01:34So, within our own laboratory, we have collaborations with physicists
    • 01:39who are in the faculty of Arts and Sciences and Yale,
    • 01:42and our work with them really helps us model the genome,
    • 01:45thinking about actually the genome and its mechanical contributions to the nucleus,
    • 01:50thinking about how the nucleus responds to force.
    • 01:54- We're quite flexible in the way we approach sites.
    • 01:57We ask questions and we use the experimental model systems and the experimental techniques
    • 02:04that are most suited or best suited to answer those questions.
    • 02:13So I think one of the most
    • 02:14exciting things about doing fundamental biology
    • 02:18is that we often don't know where it's going to lead.
    • 02:23We have no idea.
    • 02:24And I think this is, to me, one of the most exciting elements
    • 02:27of the science that we do because it enables really unanticipated discovery.
    • 02:34- Really be as basic scientists, someone who sits in the middle
    • 02:38of really fundamental concepts that we really lean on
    • 02:42many of our other disciplines and kind of the physical, chemical
    • 02:46and basic sciences.
    • 02:48But really motivated by observations that come from clinical medicine
    • 02:51and where there are open questions,
    • 02:53where really at the basic scientists are essential, to really make progress ultimately
    • 02:59and connecting these two worlds
    • 03:00that might seem really far apart, but actually we can see
    • 03:03are both really, in many ways interested in some of the same fundamental questions.