
Dr Abdelkader Essafi
BSc(Lond.), PhD(Lond.)
Current positions
Associate Professor in Genetics
School of Cellular and Molecular Medicine
Contact
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Research interests
Embryonic reprogramming (in disease) laboratory
Our development from a single cell requires phenomenal growth. Finely tuned embryonic programs coordinated by highly conserved regulatory networks keep this growth in check. In adult cells, the embryonic processes remain dormant, but external pathogens and cell-autonomous changes re-wire the cell’s molecular networks to re-activate the embryonic processes. It is exactly the hijacking of dormant embryonic phenomena that render cancer cells drug resistant, stem cell-like and metastatic. Regrettably, our understanding of how this hijack and re-wiring happens remains limited.
Using a multidisciplinary approach that incorporates sequencing, 3D culture and inducible gene editing tools as well as computational biology, we aim to answer two key questions:
- How are embryonic programs re-awakened during disease progression?
- How can we therapeutically reverse (i.e. treat), if not altogether stop (i.e. prevent), these abnormal re-activations?
My way into understanding how this re-wiring happens is a protein called Wilms Tumour protein (WT1). This focus is clinically relevant, as WT1 is a prime oncofoetal antigen, in fact it topped a national cancer institute (NCI) antigen prioritization list. As a developmental regulator, WT1’s well-documented expression is restricted to few specialised cell types in the adult (e.g. podocytes, sertoli cells and pericytes) yet it is uniquely and abnormally reactivated in epithelial cancer cells and leukaemic stem cells. Consequently, WT1-based immunotherapy clinical trials in haematopoietic and solid tumours are showing promising results.
The dissection of the regulatory and epigenetic mechanisms that underlie WT1 reactivation in cancer will be a paradigm for understanding the dynamic malfunction of embryonic reprogramming in pathology.
Career history
- 2016- present: Senior Lecturer in Cancer Biology (CMM).
- 2013-2016: Lecturer in Cancer Biology, school of Cellular and Molecular Medicine (CMM), Bristol (+2 years career break).
- 2012-2013: MRC Senior Investigator Scientist, MRC HGU.
- 2009-2012: Wellcome trust-Beit Memorial Research Fellow, MRC Institute of Genetics and Molecular Medicine (MRC IGMM), University of Edinburgh.
- 2007-2009: MRC Career Development Fellow, MRC Human Genetics (MRC HGU), Edinburgh.
Education
- 2002-2006: PhD Biochemistry, Imperial College London.
- 1999-2002: BSc (hons) Genetics, UCL.
Current Funding
- Wellcome Trust Seed Award in Science: 2017-2018
- University Lecturer Start up fund, University of Bristol: 2015-2016
- The University Cancer Research Fund Committee: 2015-2016
Career Break
Dr Essafi has had career break (2 years from April 2014) due to an accident that resulted in spinal cord injury and paraplegia.
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
The generation and maintenance of hybrid epithelial-mesenchymal (E-M) cell phenotypes
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Cellular and Molecular MedicineDates
01/03/2019 to 30/04/2023
Hybrid epithelial-mesenchymal states drives cellular heterogeneity in health and disease
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Cellular and Molecular MedicineDates
15/03/2018 to 14/03/2019
Thesis supervisions
Publications
Recent publications
30/09/2020Functional Transcription Factor Target Networks Illuminate Control of Epithelial Remodelling
Cancers
Fibroblast growth factors (FGFs) prime the limb specific Shh enhancer for chromatin changes that balance histone acetylation mediated by E26 transformation-specific (ETS) factors
eLife
Mutations in HNF1A result in marked alterations of plasma glycan profile
Diabetes
Opposing functions of the ETS factor family define Shh spatial expression in limb buds and underlie polydactyly
Developmental Cell
A Wt1-controlled chromatin switching mechanism underpins tissue-specific Wnt4 activation and repression
Developmental Cell