Super-resolution imaging of transcription in living cells

 · Invited

Abstract

We will discuss the latest efforts in our laboratory to develop highly sensitive methods of microscopy, to go directly inside living cells and uncover the behavior of single biomolecules as they effect their function in transcription. Transcription is the first step in gene expression regulation, during which genetic information on DNA is decoded into RNA transcripts. Methodologically, the so-called live cell single molecule and super-resolution techniques – that break the optical diffraction limit– are revealing with unprecedented spatial and temporal resolutions, novel emergent phenomena inside the living cells. We will discuss our recent discoveries on highly dynamic biomolecular clustering, and phase transitions in vivo. These discoveries are challenging the ‘textbook view’ on how our genome (DNA) is decoded in living cells.

*NIH NIGMS R01
NIH New Innovator Award
NIH 4D Nucleome
PEW Charitable Trusts
SCIALOG (Research Corporation and Gordon & Betty Moore Foundation)
HFSP

Presenters

  • Ibrahim Cisse

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

Authors

  • Ibrahim Cisse

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT