Headshot of Xin Gu

Xin Gu, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor of Cancer Biology (Dana-Farber Cancer Institute)
Assistant Professor of Cell Biology (HMS)

Xin Gu, Ph.D. joined Harvard Medical School and Dana-Farber Cancer Institute as an Assistant Professor of Cell Biology in September 2024. She received her Bachelor of Science degree in Biology at Peking University, then obtained her Ph.D. in Biology at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She performed postdoctoral work in the Department of Neurobiology at Harvard Medical School.

The Gu Lab focuses on elucidating how cells regulate proteasomal degradation independently of ubiquitination. We discovered a non-canonical proteolysis mechanism, the midnolin-proteasome pathway, that bypasses ubiquitination to selectively degrade numerous stimulus-responsive and cell-type specific transcription factors including EGR1, IRF4, Fos, NeuroD1, STAT3, and NR4A1. The Gu lab will characterize the midnolin-proteasome pathway using biochemical, structural, and cellular experiments. Additionally, genetically engineered animal models will be used to determine the roles of midnolin in organismal physiology and pathology. The long-term goal is to manipulate the midnolin-proteasome pathway either genetically or pharmacologically to control brain functions, modulate the immune system, and destroy cancer cells. The Gu lab is also interested in identifying other ubiquitin-independent mechanisms that degrade different substrate repertoires as well as the crosstalk of protein homeostasis with chromatin biology and metabolism. Overall, we seek to elucidate fundamental mechanisms related to cell biology using a diverse experimental tool kit.

Dana Farber Cancer Institute

Dept. of Cancer Biology, LC-6312

360 Longwood Avenue

Boston MA. 02115

Lab Phone: (617) 632-4594

KICSTOR recruits GATOR1 to the lysosome and is necessary for nutrients to regulate mTORC1.
Authors: Authors: Wolfson RL, Chantranupong L, Wyant GA, Gu X, Orozco JM, Shen K, Condon KJ, Petri S, Kedir J, Scaria SM, Abu-Remaileh M, Frankel WN, Sabatini DM.
Nature
View full abstract on Pubmed