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Xuetong (Snow) Shen, Ph.D./
Email

snowshen(at)mac.com


Research Direction

Biochemistry, Cell Biology, Cancer Biology

Timeline
Areas
Results
Honors
Media
Recruitment
Papers
Timeline
2021 - Present
Shenzhen Bay Laboratory

Senior Principal Investigator

2007 - 2021
MD Anderson Cancer Center

Associate Professor (Tenured)

2002 - 2007
MD Anderson Cancer Center

Assistant Professor

1996 - 2002
National Cancer Institute, NIH

Postdoctoral Fellow

1993 - 1996
University of Rochester

PHD in Molecular and Cell Biology

1991 - 1993
University of Rochester

University of Rochester

1987 - 1991
Peking University

BS in Physiology and Biophysics

Research Areas

My early work focuses on chromatin biology, mainly on the biological role of histones and the molecular mechanisms of chromatin remodeling. My current efforts focus on building two new areas in actin biology, one is one nuclear action, the other on the Actin Code.

Highlights

Dr. Xuetong (Snow) Shen received his BS in Biophysics from Peking University in 1991. He received his MS degree in Molecular Biology in 1993 and PHD degree in Molecular and Cell Biology in 1996 from University of Rochester. From 1996 to 2002, he completed postdoctoral training at the National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health. Dr. Shen became a Principal Investigator at the MD Anderson Cancer Center in 2002, and was tenured in 2007.

Dr. Shen’s scientific career is distinguished by original science of fundamental importance. He was one of the major leaders in the revolution of chromatin biology and epigenetics. As a PhD student, his research showed that linker histones play sophisticated regulatory roles in transcription (Cell1995 andCell1996). These findings contributed to a paradigm shift on histones and forecasted the “Chromatin Revolution”. During postdoctoral training, Dr. Shen discovered a new class of chromatin remodeling complexes and solved several major problems in the chromatin field (Nature2000,Science2003,Science2004). As an independent PI from 2002, Dr. Shen’s lab pioneered in linking chromatin to DNA damage response, and developed an intellectual framework for chromatin-based DNA repair, which subsequently helped open up a new field to study DNA damage response from a chromatin viewpoint (Cell2004,Cell2007,Nature Structural & Molecular Biology2010,Genes & Development2015,Molecular Cell2015).

Dr. Shen has published more than 10 articles inCell, Science,andNature, and is known for his landmark contributions to several areas of biology. Over the past two decades, Dr. Shen continued to innovate beyond chromatin biology, and has opened up two new major research directions. In the first direction, Dr. Shen will establish nuclear actin biology, which will rival classic cytoplasmic actin biology. In the second direction, Dr. Shen will establish Actin Code, similar to the establishment of the Histone Code. Given the evolutionary conservation and fundamental importance of actin, Dr. Shen’s new research directions will have major implications to both basic science and medicine.

Honors
1996、1997 美国国立卫生院国家癌症研究所NIH NCI访问科学家奖学金
1997、1998 美国国立卫生研究院NIH博士后研究训练奖
1998、1999 美国国立卫生研究院NIH杰出研究员奖
1998-2001 美国癌症协会ACS博士后奖学金
2003-2006 美国国立卫生研究院NIH NCI K22职业发展奖
2005-2009 美国癌症协会ACS研究学者奖
2006 欧洲癌症会议主旨演讲
2008-2011 MD安德逊癌症中心优秀学者奖
2008 霍华德休斯HHMI研究员选举半决赛
2009 霍华德休斯HHMI早期研究员选举半决赛
Media
Recruitment
Papers

1. 1995 Cell Linker histones are not essential and affect chromatin condensation in vivo.

2. 2000 Nature A chromatin remodelling complex involved in transcription and DNA processing.

3. 2003 Science Modulation of ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling complexes by inositol polyphosphates.

4. 2004 Cell INO80 and gamma-H2AX interaction links ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling to DNA damage repair.

5. 2007 Cell Mec1/Tel1 phosphorylation of the INO80 chromatin remodeling complex influences DNA damage checkpoint responses.