Junior Research Group

Translational Control and Metabolism

  • Functional and Structural Genomics
  • Junior Research Group
Fabricio Loayza Puch

Dr. Fabricio Loayza-Puch

Group Leader

Our laboratory uses a combination of innovative genomics tools, molecular biology, animal models, and bioinformatics to uncover metabolic limitations in cancer.

Our Research

The demand for building blocks in cancer cells differs greatly from the one of a normal cell. In order to divide, a cell must duplicate its protein content, a process that requires large amounts of energy and amino acid resources. To cope with a higher demand of energy and building blocks, cancer cells rewire profoundly their metabolic networks. However, the metabolic changes a tumor undergoes to adapt to deregulated growth might expose vulnerabilities that can be exploited for therapy. To exploit amino acid vulnerabilities for cancer therapy, one must first identify which amino acid is the most restrictive to the tumor. Our laboratory uses a combination of innovative genomics tools, molecular biology, animal models, and bioinformatics to uncover these metabolic limitations in cancer. Recently, we developed a novel approach to detect restrictive amino acids in cells and tumors. The rationale of our approach is based on differential ribosome codon reading (diricore); we make use of ribosome profiling to detect ribosomes stalled at specific codons. The accumulation of ribosomes at a particular codon indicates that the corresponding aminoacylated tRNA might be limiting and suggests a deficiency of the amino acid. The diricore approach can be used as a platform to sense these amino acid deficiencies in cells and tumors and to expose the weaknesses of tumor's metabolic remodeling.

Future Outlook
RNA functions not only as a carrier of genetic information, but also as a catalyst and guide for the processing or regulation of other RNA molecules. Using a combination of innovative sequencing techniques and functional genomics, our group aims to understand the role of mRNA translation in cancer and metastasis. We explore the global impact of RNA modifications and the role of non-coding RNAs on mRNA translation. At the same time, we use the global positional information of ribosomes as a readout to infer metabolic deficiencies in tumors, such limitations have the potential to be exploited as novel cancer therapies.

Team

  • Fabricio Loayza Puch

    Dr. Fabricio Loayza-Puch

    Group Leader

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  • Rossella Del Pizzo

    Rossella Del Pizzo

    PhD Student

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  • Andres Elia

    Postdoc

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  • Lilli-Joelle Kohler

    Trainee

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  • Alexander Kowar

    Alexander Kowar

    PhD Student

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  • Giuliana Palazzo

    Giuliana Palazzo

    PhD Student

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  • Zhiwei Tang

    Zhiwei Tang

    PhD Student

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  • Yuchong Yu

    Yuchong Yu

    PhD Student

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Selected Publications

2024 - Nature Communications 15, 7458
2016 - Nature, 25;530 (7591): 490-494

Tumour-specific proline vulnerability uncovered by differential ribosome codon reading.

2013 - Nature Communications 2:2886

Ribosome profiling reveals features of normal and disease-associated mitochondrial translation.

2012 - Cell, 149(3):538-553

The poly(a)-binding protein nuclear 1 suppresses alternative cleavage and polyadenylation sites.

Get in touch with us

Fabricio Loayza Puch
Dr. Fabricio Loayza-Puch
Group Leader
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