University of California San Francisco
Erica Hutchins, PhD
Assistant Professor
The Hutchins Lab seeks to map how post-transcriptional regulation controls developmental pluripotency and cell fate decisions in vivo, using vertebrate neural crest as a model.
Neural crest cells are an essential stem cell population in the vertebrate embryo. During development, these cells must undergo coordinated induction, specification, and epithelial—mesenchymal transition (EMT) events to migrate and ultimately develop into a wide range of cell types that contribute to the adult organism.
Dysregulated post-transcriptional regulatory linkages in neural crest can lead to congenital malformations and cancer in humans, and a thorough understanding of the mechanisms underlying these fundamental processes can provide new therapeutic targets for biomedical intervention.
By leveraging systems-level approaches and cutting-edge developmental biology techniques to understand how neural crest cell state transitions are achieved post-transcriptionally to drive cell fate choices, we can begin to understand how these programs fail during development or may be hijacked during disease.
The major research goals of our laboratory are:
1) To identify the post-transcriptional regulatory linkages controlling neural crest fate decisions across developmental time and space
2) To parse the intersection of intrinsic and extrinsic factors with post-transcriptional regulation during neural crest and nervous system development
3) To leverage post-transcriptional regulatory linkages controlling EMT and migration in neural crest and neural crest-derived cancers
Education and Training
University of California
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Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Champion Training
08/2022
California Institute of Technology
Postdoctoral Training
Developmental Biology
07/2022
University at Albany, State University of New York
PhD
Biology
12/2013
Associated Programs
Publications
Title
Author (s)
Journal
Date Published
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2024-11-30