Bradley E. Bernstein, M.D., Ph.D.

Bradley Bernstein, M.D., Ph.D.

Chair of Cancer Biology (Dana-Farber Cancer Institute)
Richard and Nancy Lubin Family Chair (DFCI)
Professor of Pathology (HMS)
Professor of Cell Biology (HMS)
LC-8313, 450 Brookline Avenue

Bradley Bernstein, M.D., Ph.D. is the Chair of Cancer Biology at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, where he holds the Richard and Nancy Lubin Family Chair. He is also the Director of the Gene Regulation Observatory at the Broad Institute, a Professor of Pathology and a Professor of Cell Biology at Harvard Medical School, and an Investigator in Harvard’s Ludwig Institute.

Dr. Bernstein’s research focuses on epigenetic gene regulation. The Bernstein Lab studies how gene activity is controlled by noncoding regulatory elements such as ‘enhancers’, and by the way the genes are packaged into chromatin. His work is notable for the discovery of ‘bivalent domains’, a signature chromatin state consisting of opposing histone modifications that poise master genes for alternate fates. His characterization of bivalent chromatin and associated regulatory factors in stem cells was a key early demonstration of the mechanistic impact of chromatin on mammalian development. His subsequent work as a leader of the NIH’s ENCODE consortium revealed that the vast ‘noncoding’ portions of the human genome, which had previously been dismissed as ‘junk’, are in fact packed with sequence elements that control gene activity.

Dr. Bernstein’s second major area of contribution is cancer epigenetics. He showed that DNA methylation can activate oncogenes by disrupting genomic insulators, an entirely unexpected discovery given that methylation had been so closely tied to repression. This finding explains how certain tumors can sustain potent oncogenic signaling in the absence of canonical mutations. His group has also uncovered epigenetic mechanisms that underlie tumor cell self-renewal, drug tolerance and immune evasion.

Dr. Bernstein received his B.S. from Yale University in 1992 and his M.D. and Ph.D. from the University of Washington in 1999, before completing a residency in clinical pathology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and postdoctoral research at Harvard University.

Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

Cancer Biology/LC-8313

450 Brookline Avenue

Boston, MA 02215

Office: 617-632-5160

Genome-wide maps of chromatin state in pluripotent and lineage-committed cells.
Authors: Authors: Mikkelsen TS, Ku M, Jaffe DB, Issac B, Lieberman E, Giannoukos G, Alvarez P, Brockman W, Kim TK, Koche RP, Lee W, Mendenhall E, O'Donovan A, Presser A, Russ C, Xie X, Meissner A, Wernig M, Jaenisch R, Nusbaum C, Lander ES, Bernstein BE.
Nature
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In vitro reprogramming of fibroblasts into a pluripotent ES-cell-like state.
Authors: Authors: Wernig M, Meissner A, Foreman R, Brambrink T, Ku M, Hochedlinger K, Bernstein BE, Jaenisch R.
Nature
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The mammalian epigenome.
Authors: Authors: Bernstein BE, Meissner A, Lander ES.
Cell
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Genome-wide analysis of histone modifications by ChIP-on-chip.
Authors: Authors: Huebert DJ, Kamal M, O'Donovan A, Bernstein BE.
Methods
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Molecular regulation of H3K4 trimethylation by ASH2L, a shared subunit of MLL complexes.
Authors: Authors: Steward MM, Lee JS, O'Donovan A, Wyatt M, Bernstein BE, Shilatifard A.
Nat Struct Mol Biol
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A bivalent chromatin structure marks key developmental genes in embryonic stem cells.
Authors: Authors: Bernstein BE, Mikkelsen TS, Xie X, Kamal M, Huebert DJ, Cuff J, Fry B, Meissner A, Wernig M, Plath K, Jaenisch R, Wagschal A, Feil R, Schreiber SL, Lander ES.
Cell
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Genomic views of chromatin.
Authors: Authors: Huebert DJ, Bernstein BE.
Curr Opin Genet Dev
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Genomic maps and comparative analysis of histone modifications in human and mouse.
Authors: Authors: Bernstein BE, Kamal M, Lindblad-Toh K, Bekiranov S, Bailey DK, Huebert DJ, McMahon S, Karlsson EK, Kulbokas EJ, Gingeras TR, Schreiber SL, Lander ES.
Cell
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Large-scale discovery and validation of functional elements in the human genome.
Authors: Authors: Bernstein BE, Kellis M.
Genome Biol
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Rpd3p relocation mediates a transcriptional response to rapamycin in yeast.
Authors: Authors: Humphrey EL, Shamji AF, Bernstein BE, Schreiber SL.
Chem Biol
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