Department of Genetics - PhD Chromatinopathies
Do you want to combine clinical genetics with cutting-edge functional genomics? Join the Department of Genetics as a PhD candidate to study how patient DNA variants in chromatin regulators drive neurodevelopmental disease.
Chromatinopathies (CPs) are Mendelian disorders caused by mutations in chromatin regulators and often present with neurodevelopmental delay and intellectual disability. While many CPs have distinct clinical features, subsets show overlapping phenotypes and cluster into molecular groups. We hypothesize that within these subgroups, different CPs converge on common defects in chromatin state, 3D genome organization, and transcriptional programs, revealing shared biological vulnerabilities and potential future therapeutic entry points.
This PhD project is jointly supervised by Dr. Renske Oegema (clinical geneticist) and Dr. Peter Krijger (molecular biologist). The two research PIs combine expertise in clinical genetics and access to well-characterized patient cohorts with mechanistic gene regulation and functional genomics. You will model patient variants in chromatin regulators using genome editing and cellular disease models and apply chromatin and 3D genome profiling to determine how these variants disrupt chromatin state, genome folding, and transcription.
Your research will focus on:
You will join the Research Section of the Department of Genetics (UMC Utrecht), embedded in a dynamic translational setting with close ties to the Wilhelmina Children’s Hospital (WKZ) and Center for Molecular Medicine (CMM). Our location at the Utrecht Science Park enables extensive interactions and joint projects with neighboring institutes.
Met ruim 12.000 medewerkers is het UMC Utrecht, inclusief het Wilhelmina Kinderziekenhuis de grootste werkgever in de regio Utrecht.Elke... Lees meer
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