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Stem Cells, Jumping Genes, & RNA Regulation at the Lin Lab

April 24, 2026
ID
14117

Transcript

  • 00:06Stem cells are amazing cells.
  • 00:07They are a very small
  • 00:09number of cells in our
  • 00:10bodies
  • 00:11that have two special properties.
  • 00:13The first one is they
  • 00:15can self renew, namely whenever
  • 00:17they divide
  • 00:18they can make a copy
  • 00:19of themselves.
  • 00:20So they become so called
  • 00:22immortal cells during our lifespan.
  • 00:24And the second property is
  • 00:26that they can generate
  • 00:27many specialized cells or ordinary
  • 00:30cells that are directly involved
  • 00:31in tissue functions, and that's
  • 00:33a process called differentiation.
  • 00:35So because of these two
  • 00:36key properties that make stem
  • 00:38cells very special.
  • 00:44My lab has worked on
  • 00:45lots of things, but the
  • 00:46common theme is working on
  • 00:48the key genes
  • 00:50that regulate the self renewing
  • 00:52ability of stem cells. And
  • 00:54particularly, we focus on,
  • 00:56those genes which are not
  • 00:58traditionally
  • 00:58studied.
  • 01:00Genetic information
  • 01:01encoded in our DNA
  • 01:03is then made into copies
  • 01:05of blueprints
  • 01:06called messenger RNA, guide the
  • 01:08production proteins.
  • 01:09And this
  • 01:11supposedly leads to the start
  • 01:12of inter life process.
  • 01:14But actually recently, we found
  • 01:16that the story is not
  • 01:17that simple
  • 01:18because protein coding genes, they
  • 01:20are not the entire
  • 01:22picture of the secret of
  • 01:23life. And they actually only
  • 01:24occupies one percent of our
  • 01:26genome. How about the other
  • 01:28ninety nine percent of DNA?
  • 01:29People used to, you know,
  • 01:32show no function in the
  • 01:33DNAs and call them junk
  • 01:35DNAs. And recently, we discovered
  • 01:38that so called junk DNA
  • 01:40are hiding different kind of
  • 01:41genes, and they're equally important.
  • 01:43We have twenty three thousand
  • 01:44genes in our human genome,
  • 01:45but we have one million
  • 01:47of jumping genes in this
  • 01:48junk DNA. Now we found
  • 01:50that they're very important function
  • 01:51in regulating the protein coding
  • 01:53genes.
  • 01:57So we take a very
  • 01:58systematic approach,
  • 02:00namely that's a multidisciplinary
  • 02:02approach
  • 02:03from a methodology perspective.
  • 02:05First, we usually use cell
  • 02:07or developmental biology methods, like
  • 02:09microscopy,
  • 02:11transplantation,
  • 02:12or laser ablation
  • 02:13to identify stem cells in
  • 02:15tissues.
  • 02:16And once we know where
  • 02:17are the stem cells
  • 02:19exactly located
  • 02:20in the tissues, then we
  • 02:22take a genetic approach
  • 02:23to knock out genes in
  • 02:25the genome
  • 02:26to see which genes knock
  • 02:28out will lead to stem
  • 02:29cell defect. And then after
  • 02:30that we take a molecular,
  • 02:33biochemical,
  • 02:34and also genomic approach
  • 02:36to study how the gene
  • 02:38looks like, what kind of
  • 02:39function they will do when
  • 02:40they make their proteins,
  • 02:42and what will the protein,
  • 02:44will be doing in the
  • 02:45cell
  • 02:46to make certain kind of
  • 02:47stem cell structure or turn
  • 02:49on off certain signaling pathways
  • 02:51in stem cells. Recently, my
  • 02:52lab also took on structural
  • 02:54biology approach.
  • 02:55We are using cryo electron
  • 02:57microscopy
  • 02:58to study those key proteins
  • 03:01that determine stem cell fate,
  • 03:04how they look like, and
  • 03:05how they function,
  • 03:07is, you know, moved in
  • 03:09three d and four d
  • 03:10way, to really
  • 03:12switch the function of other
  • 03:14molecules in the cells.
  • 03:20In my lab we have
  • 03:21been focusing on when these
  • 03:23stem cell genes are active
  • 03:25in non stem cells,
  • 03:26or when they are overly
  • 03:28active in stem cells, what
  • 03:29kind of cancer they will
  • 03:30cause. And we found that
  • 03:32many
  • 03:33types of cancers,
  • 03:35actually related to this.
  • 03:37And so this is very
  • 03:38exciting for us because
  • 03:40it provides a new approach
  • 03:42to understand and potential to
  • 03:43treat cancers. Now we can
  • 03:45use a small RNAs
  • 03:47that specifically knock down these,
  • 03:48overly active stem cell genes,
  • 03:51and we see a tremendous
  • 03:52impact. And so this is
  • 03:54a method very different from
  • 03:55the current,
  • 03:56immunotherapy.
  • 03:57We hope to actually develop
  • 03:59or help develop a, a
  • 04:01completely new
  • 04:02type of targeted approach to
  • 04:04cancer research.