ZHENG LAB @ FUDAN UNIVERSITY
Epigenetics in
Development and Disease

News and Events


09-29-2024
Welcome Haibin Zhu from East China University of Science and Technology to our laboratory. He is interested at transgenerational regulation mechanisms of diseases, aiming to utilize single-cell multi-omics technology to uncover how parental diseases influence offspring development.

08-12-2024
Welcome Di Liu from Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences to join our laboratory. She focuses on wet experimental research and is aspire to leverage single-cell multi-omics technology to gain insights into the mechanisms underlying early embryonic development.

08-12-2024
Welcome Xinran Wang from Fudan University to our laboratory. As a skilled bioinformatician, Xinran brings a keen interest in delving into the intricate, multidimensional regulatory mechanisms underlying development and disease processes, leveraging the power of single-cell omics technologies.

02-06-2024
The first paper in our laboratory is online now! We have investigated the influence of COVID-19 vaccination in COVID-19 convalescents. The details can be accessed here.

11-01-2023
Our laboratory is established in Fudan University!
And our lab website is online now!

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RESEARCH OVERVIEW

The precise regulation of gene expression and epigenetic modification maintains health status in the whole life span, from germ cells, embryos to adults. Our group has long-lasting interest in the basic cellular and molecular mechanisms of how the specific phenotype is regulated during development and disease in a genomic context.


Inflammatory memory in adults and offspring

Immunological memory of previous inflammatory or infectious encounters is characterized as a defining property of trained immunity associated with innate immune systems. Tissue resident cell types can develop memory as well. Our group utilizes the high-throughput sequencing technology to investigate how to shape inflammatory memory through epigenetic mechanisms at the chromatin level. Key mechanisms are further explored experimentally.




Developmental origins of disease

Within offspring with significant clinical outcomes, our group utilizes single-cell genomics methods to study the cellular and molecular effects induced by the parental disease or environmental exposure. Single-cell muliti-omics technology is widely applied to explore this field, including transcriptome and epigenome profiles. It involves the development biology and epigenetics knowledge.




Disease-induced immune responses and regulation mechanisms in the disease progression

Our group is interested in the clinical issues, including disease-induced immune responses and microenvironments promoting disease progression. The high-throughput sequencing technology, multi-omics data intergration method, animal models, and other functional experiment are combined to address the related problems.