Dr. Zhang is studying a unique three-stranded nucleic acid structure, called an R-loop, to understand its role in cancer development and find ways to target and control its formation. R-loops consist of a DNA-RNA hybrid and a displaced strand of DNA. R-loops occur frequently in human genomes, and while they play an important role in blood cell differentiation and immune cell function, they can also interfere with DNA repair and promote genome instability, giving rise to leukemia. However, the dynamic nature of R-loop formation hampers the detection of this structure in a small cell sample. To address this challenge, Dr. Zhang is developing novel techniques to map R-loops in normal blood stem cells versus blood cancer cells at single-cell resolution. He also plans to investigate leukemia-specific R-loops in vitro and in vivo with CRISPR-based screening techniques. The goal of his research is to aid development of therapeutic interventions for R-loop-related gene expression dysregulation in cancer, especially leukemia. Dr. Zhang received his PhD from Ohio State University, Columbus, his MS from University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, and his BS from Chongqing University, Chongqing.
Damon Runyon Researchers
Meet Our ScientistsPu Zhang, PhD
Project title: "Understanding the role of R-loops in cancer at the single cell level"
Institution: Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
Award Program: Fellow
Sponsor(s) / Mentor(s): Omar Abdel-Wahab, MD
Cancer Type: Blood
Research Area: Epigenetics