Co-Chair,
Transcriptional & Chromosomal Regulation
Research Program
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
jlw@stowers-institute.org
Jerry Workman, PhD chairs the University of Kansas Cancer Center’s
Transcriptional and Chromosomal Regulation Research Program. Dr.
Workman is working with Dr. Roy Jensen to further develop this
program.
Dr. Workman’s laboratory studies epigenetic regulation
of gene expression by identifying, purifying and analyzing multisubunit
protein complexes that modify chromatin for transcription. His
laboratory has identified a number of histone acetyltransferases,
histone deacetylases, histone methylases, histone de-methylases,
and ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling complexes. He has
determined that many of the identified subunits of these complexes
are involved in tumor progression or suppression in humans, analysis
of their functions provides insights into molecular mechanism
of cancer. He is currently conducting studies to further investigate
the role of these complexes and their respective histone modifications
in the development of multicellular organisms.
Background
Dr. Workman received his BS degree in Biology from
Northern Illinois University in Dekalb, Illinois. He went
on to receive his PhD in Cell and Molecular Biology in 1985 from
the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Dr.
Workman completed his Postdoc training in Bio Chemistry in 1988
at Rockefeller University in New York and in Genetics at Harvard
Medical School in Boston, Massachusetts.
Dr. Workman joined the faculty of the Department of Biochemistry/Molecular
Biology at Pennsylvania State University in 1992, where he worked
until 2003. Dr. Workman served as an Associate Investigator
at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute from 1997-2003. He
joined the Stowers Institute for Medical Research in 2003 and
has served as an Investigator since. Dr. Workman additionally
serves on the National Cancer Institute’s Board of Scientific
Counselors, on the Board of Reviewing Editors for SCIENCE magazine
and on the Editorial Board of Genes and Development.
Recent Publications
- Lee, D., Ezhkova, E., Li, B., Pattenden, S., Tansey, W.P.,
Workman, J.L. (2005). The Proteasome Regulatory Particle Alters
the SAGA Coactivator to Enhance its Interactions with Transcriptional
Activators. Cell 123, 423-36.
- Prochasson, P., Florens, L., Washburn, M.P., Workman,
J.L. (2005). The HIR Corepressor Complex Binds to
Nucleosomes Generating a Distinct Protein/DNA Complex Resistant
to Remodeling by SWI/SNF. Genes
Dev., Nov
1;19(21):2534-9.
- Carrozza, M.J., Florens, L., Swanson, S.K., Lee, K.K., Shia,
W.J., Anderson, S., Yates, J.R., Washburn, M.P., Workman,
J.L. (2005). Histone H3 Methylation by Set2
Directs Deacetylation of Coding Regions by Rpd3S to Suppress
Spurious Intragenic Transcription. Cell, Nov
18;123(4):581-92.
- Li, B., Pattenden, S.G., Lee, D., Gutierrez, J., Chen, J., Seidel,
C., Gerton, J., Workman, J.L.(2005)
Preferential Occupancy of Histone Variant H2AZ at Inactive
Promoters Influences Local Histone
Modifications and Chromatin Remodeling , Proc. Natl.
Acad. Sci., Dec 20;102(51):18385-90.
- Carrozza, M.J.,
Florens, L., Swanson, S.K., Lee, K.K., Shia, W.J., Anderson,
S., Yates, J.R., Washburn, M.P., Workman,
J.L. (2005). Histone H3 Methylation by Set2
Directs Deacetylation of Coding Regions by Rpd3S to Suppress
Spurious Intragenic Transcription. Cell, 123(4):581-92.
- Shia,
W.J., Li, B., Workman, J.L. (2006)
SAS-mediated acetylation of histone H4 lysine 16 is required
for H2A.Z incorporation at subtelomeric regions in Saccharomyces
cerevisiae, Genes and Development, 20:2507-12.
- Carey,
M. Li, B. Workman, J.L. (2006) RSC exploits histone acetylation
to abrogate the nucleosomal block to RNA polymerase II elongation. Mol.
Cell. 24, 481-487.
- Li, B., Carey, M., Workman,
J.L., (2007).
The Role of Chromatin during Transcription, Cell 128,
707-19.
- Li, B., Gogol, M., Carey, M., Lee, D, Seidel, C., Workman,
J.L., (2007). Combinatorial action of the Rco1 PHD
domain and the Eaf3 chromodomain directs the Rpd3S complex
to deacetylate transcribed chromatin, Science 316,
1050-4.
- Li, B., Gogol, M., Carey, M., Pattenden, S. G., Seidel,
C., Workman,
J.L., (2007) Infrequently transcribed long genes
depend on the Set2/Rpd3S pathway for accurate transcription, Genes
and Development 21, 1422-30.