Joseph (joe) Lipsick
Professor
Department of Genetics
Stanford University School of Medicine
United States of America
Biography
Joseph (Joe) Lipsick is Professor of the Department of Genetics. His laboratory studies the structure and function of chromosomes and chromatin in metazoans.
Research Interest
Cancer is caused by mutations in oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes. Mutations are changes in the DNA sequence that may alter gene function. Gain-of-function mutations can activate oncogenes, whereas loss-of-function mutations can inactivate tumor suppressor genes. Our laboratory studies the Myb oncogene family that is mutated in human cancers of blood cells (leukemia), brain, breast, and salivary gland. The proteins encoded by Myb genes bind to DNA and regulate the expression of other genes that control cell division, differentiation, and cell death. The Myb proteins interact with a highly conserved multi-protein complex called the MuvB core. The same complex also interacts with proteins of the Rb tumor suppressor family and the E2F transcription factor family. Work from our laboratory has shown that Myb acts in opposition to Rb-E2F to epigenetically regulate gene expression. We are currently focusing on Drosophila melanogaster (fruit fly) as a model system because of the powerful genetic, genomic, and cell biological tools available in this organism.
Publications
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Grigorian M, DeBruhl H, Lipsick J S (2017) The role of variant histone H2AV in D. melanogaster larval hematopoiesis. Development 144(8): 1441-1449.