Quantitative analysis of the biological forces and their context in tissue patterning

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R35 · $480,000 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Rules specifying form and function of an organism are encoded in the genome. Over the years, a variety of approaches have been leveraged to elucidate the underlying programs and machinery that govern the size and form of different organs or structures. These include genetic strategies, employed to identify gene products that control developmental events, and biochemical advances that have provided molecular insights into how communication between individual cells during development is accomplished. While information theory and mathematical modeling have made inroads toward integrating genetic and molecular aspects of development, these approaches are fundamentally limited by the simple fact that most measurements that guide these applications (either genetic or biochemical) are often derived from experimental contexts that lack the spatial or temporal richness found in vivo.  My research team is prepared to address a theoretical, quantitative, and computational program at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) with an emphasis on in vivo cellular imaging and in situ sequencing technologies for gene expression and cell lineage analysis during development. During my postdoctoral training, I developed an in situ RNA sequencing technology that can be generally employed to determine the spatial and informational heterogeneity of gene expression in a genome-wide manner. As an independent investigator I have adapted this technology to monitor gene expression in developing tissues. These methods enable the simultaneous measurement of gene expression patterns in thousands of single cells in the context of a developing cell lineage. While simple in concept, this major advance will allow dynamic and temporal changes in gene expression to be directly tied to three-dimensional architecture, enabling the mathematical modeling of key developmental processes in the absence of prior limitations. Initially, we will focus on understanding how oscillations in gene expression pattern, including those mediated by the cell cycle, modulate growth factor signaling. Specifically, we will determine if cyclical patterns of gene expression are sufficient to generate a morphogenic field that controls the size and shape of developing structures or how these patterns contribute to the robustness of these processes in vivo. We will also determine the molecular mechanisms of gradient-associated transcriptional initiation/elongation using direct RNA sequencing in situ. Both oscillatory gene expression and morphogen gradient-associated transcriptional initiation/elongation impact aspects of cell fate commitment stem cells (important in tissue regeneration and homeostasis) and these approaches can be used to dissect the contribution of multiple genetic pathways in vivo. In summary, we have the conceptual framework, biological questions, cutting-edge technologies, and rigorous scientific environment to better characterize the biological forces driving tissue patterning and developmen...

Key facts

NIH application ID
9938627
Project number
5R35GM119772-05
Recipient
COLD SPRING HARBOR LABORATORY
Principal Investigator
Je Hyuk Lee
Activity code
R35
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$480,000
Award type
5
Project period
2016-08-19 → 2021-05-31