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David J. Clark, Ph.D. As
an undergraduate, I studied Biochemistry at the University of Oxford,
where I developed my enthusiasm for chromatin structure and gene regulation.
I obtained my Ph.D. in 1987 from the University of Cambridge under the
supervision of Professor Jean Thomas. My thesis work was aimed at understanding
the structural role of histone H1 in chromatin. I moved to the United
States to carry out postdoctoral work in Dr. Gary Felesenfeld's lab at
the NIH. Initially, we investigated the effects of DNA supercoiling on
nucleosome structure. Later, we addressed the problem of how RNA polymerase
transcribes through a nucleosome.
When I set up my own lab at the NIH, I decided to tackle the problem of how transcription is activated in the natural context of chromatin structure. Our studies have led me to believe that chromatin structure is designed to be an integral component of the activation process (as it is in gene repression); our current efforts are aimed at clarifying this role. Contact Information:Dr. David J. Clark Tel.: 301 496 6966 |
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