MELISSA HENRIKSEN
- Assistant Professor of Biology
- Email: mah2hx@virginia.edu
- Office: (434) 243-4945
- Lab: (434) 243-4946
- Office: 212 PLSB
EDUCATION
- B.A., The College of Holy Cross, 1990
- Ph.D., The University of Pennsylvania, 1996
- Postdoc, The Rockefeller University, 2000
RESEARCH INTERESTS
My laboratory studies the epigenetic mechanisms that contribute to gene expression. A human cell contains about two meters of DNA in its tiny nucleus, presenting a phenomenal packaging problem. To manage, the cell relies on chromatin to organize its genome. Chromatin's operational structure is the nucleosome, consisting of 146 bp of DNA wrapped around a bundle of eight core histone proteins (H3, H4, H2A and H2B). The packing of nucleosomes into increasingly complex structures explains how the DNA fits. But when genes are expressed, the chromatin template must alter its structure, unpacking itself to make those genes accessible to the scores of proteins involved in transcription. Epigenetics, then, is the study of how modifications to the chromatin template establish and propagate differences in gene expression. We aim to define the epigenetic controls that contribute to tumorigenesis and cancer stem cell plasticity in Neuroblastoma, as well as the histone modifications that regulate inducible gene expression downstream of the STAT signaling pathway. For more information about our research, visit our laboratory page.
REPRESENTATIVE PUBLICATIONS


