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Wang Laboratory

Siyao Wang

About the Lab

DNA damage poses a major threat to genome stability, chromosomal integrity, and cellular function. Defects in transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair (TC-NER) cause growth and mental retardation, photosensitivity, and premature ageing in Cockayne syndrome (CS) patients. To ensure a successful process of DNA repair, chromatin serves as a platform and is dynamically changed during the DNA damage response (DDR), as described by the Access-Repair-Restore model. As a crucial part of chromatin, histones are post-translationally modified via methylation, ubiquitination, and acetylation to regulate DDR-related chromatin functions. Importantly, in contrast to the transient process of DNA repair, many histone modifications can leave a long- term epigenetic memory and can be passed down to further generations, raising the question of whether DNA damage could reshape the epigenome in the damaged cells and even affect their descendants.

The aim of Wang-lab is to study the role of histone modifications on genome stability, aging and transgenerational inheritance through using Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans) as a model. Specifically, we will focus on three main questions:

  1. Investigate the epigenetic regulation of long-term and transgenerational consequences of transcription-blocking DNA damage in cellular homeostasis and longevity.
  2. Whether the DNA damage-induced genome instability can be passed down to further generations through epigenetic inheritance?
  3. Investigate the mechanism underlying the transgenerational effect of sperm DNA damage.

Epigenetic modifications play a crucial role in DNA damage response, transgenerational inheritance and longevity through regulating chromatin conformation and transcription. My lab aims to decipher the epigenetic code that determines longevity in response to DNA damage and provide potential therapeutic targets for DNA damage-related diseases and parental DNA damage-induced congenital diseases in offspring.

Our recent publications are available here:

Lab PI Siyao Wang

Siyao Wang is an independent PI at the Institute of Molecular Biology in Mainz and the Institute for Genome Stability in Ageing and Diseases (IGSAD) at the CECAD Research Centre of the University of Cologne since 2022. In 2010, she received her Bachelor’s degree of Medicine in China, completed her PhD training at the University of Manchester in UK in 2015 and conducted her postdoctoral research from 2015 to 2022 at the IGSAD and CECAD Research Centre in Germany. Siyao was awarded the Federation of European Biochemical Society (FEBS) Excellence Award in 2024.

Her research interest mainly focuses on epigenetics, DNA damage and aging. By using C. elegans as a model organism, Siyao has uncovered the role of histone modifications in aging in response to DNA damage and paternally inherited genome instability. Considering the central role of epigenetic regulators in aging and transgenerational inheritance, Wang establishes her lab to investigate how epigenetic modifications regulate longevity in response to DNA damage, and whether the epigenetic memory of DNA damage can be transgenerationally inherited in the consequent generations.

Siyao Wang

Siyao Wang
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Lab Members

Angelina Job Kolady
Angelina Job Kolady
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PhD/MD Student
Rose Mary Roshan
Rose Mary Roshan
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PhD/MD Student
Johann Örn Thorarensen
Johann Örn Thorarensen
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PhD/MD Student
Neda Bakhshandeh
Neda Bakhshandeh
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Technical Assistant