Chad Stein
chadbstein.bsky.social
Chad Stein
@chadbstein.bsky.social
Postdoc studying host-virus interactions from the perspective of transcription in the Glaunsinger lab @UCBerkeley | PhD from Adelman Lab @Harvard
Reposted by Chad Stein
I’m excited to share my recent postdoc work. Here, we interrogate how different phage infection outcomes (productive vs. restrictive) affect the expression of phage defense systems. We find that a restricted infection not only inhibits the phage but also induces increased immune protein abundance.
Surviving phage attack dynamically regulates bacterial immunity to defeat counterdefenses https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.11.13.688357v1
November 15, 2025 at 6:10 PM
Reposted by Chad Stein
The Vlaming lab is expanding! If you are or know a good prospective PhD student, excited about studying transcription, please (suggest them to) apply here: www.uu.nl/en/organisat...
My biased opinion: exciting topic, super nice colleagues, and great research environment in a lovely city.
PhD position in Gene Regulation
Are you excited about studying the crucial process of transcription? Join our supportive, young and growing team!
www.uu.nl
August 15, 2025 at 10:22 AM
Congrats to Azra, Sahil, and the rest of the team on their new study connecting viral infection to poly(A)-mediated stabilization of SINE transcripts!
RNA polymerase III transcription-associated polyadenylation promotes the accumulation of noncoding retrotransposons during infection https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.05.14.654096v1
May 19, 2025 at 3:14 AM
Congrats to Apoorva and the rest of the team! This was a fun project to see progress over the last few years, and there's really something for everyone: early control of transcription elongation, transposons, stress, neurodevelopmental disease - the connections abound!
Thrilled to see my postdoc work at Adelman Lab @hms-bcmp.bsky.social on Integrator(INT) now out @cp-cell.bsky.social. We found that INT deficiency allows immature+unlicensed RNAPII to precociously enter genes. This immature RNAPII can transcribe short genes but terminates prematurely in long genes:
April 15, 2025 at 12:33 AM
Reposted by Chad Stein
Reminder for the #RNA #RNAsky #GeneRegulation #Genetics #Genomics folks: the key deadlines for the @keystonesymposia.bsky.social "Epigenetics in Development and Disease" meeting in March 2025 are coming up fast (Jan 9 for short talks), and has a stellar lineup of speakers - tinyurl.com/4dwed92p
Epigenetics in Development and Disease | Keystone Symposia
Join us at the Keystone Symposia on Epigenetics in Development and Disease, March 2025, in Banff, with field leaders!
tinyurl.com
December 3, 2024 at 10:26 PM
Reposted by Chad Stein
A great collaboration with Phil Cole (Harvard) engineering Sortase to facilitate its transpeptidase activity on histone H3 has been published in JACS. This work developed multiplexed "cut-and-paste" middle-down proteomics with tandem mass tags for quantification.
pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10....
Circular Engineered Sortase for Interrogating Histone H3 in Chromatin
Reversible modification of the histone H3 N-terminal tail is critical in regulating the chromatin structure, gene expression, and cell states, while its dysregulation contributes to disease pathogenesis. Understanding the crosstalk between H3 tail modifications in nucleosomes constitutes a central challenge in epigenetics. Here, we describe an engineered sortase transpeptidase, cW11, that displays highly favorable properties for introducing scarless H3 tails onto nucleosomes. This approach significantly accelerates the production of both symmetrically and asymmetrically modified nucleosomes. We demonstrate the utility of asymmetrically modified nucleosomes produced in this way in dissecting the impact of multiple modifications on eraser enzyme processing and molecular recognition by a reader protein. Moreover, we show that cW11 sortase is very effective at cutting and tagging histone H3 tails from endogenous histones, facilitating multiplex “cut-and-paste” middle-down proteomics with tandem mass tags. This cut-and-paste proteomics approach permits the quantitative analysis of histone H3 modification crosstalk after treatment with different histone deacetylase inhibitors. We propose that these chemoenzymatic tail isolation and modification strategies made possible with cW11 sortase will broadly power epigenetic discovery and therapeutic development.
pubs.acs.org
November 26, 2024 at 3:49 PM