Institut de Duve Avenue Hippocrate 75 - B1.75.04 B-1200 Bruxelles
The De Smet Lab studies the causes and consequences of epigenetic alterations in cancer.
Maintenance of gene expression programs is essential to ensure proper functioning of the various cell types that make up the body. To this end, cells have evolved “epigenetic“ regulatory mechanisms, based on the addition of chemical modifications on certain genes. Among these, DNA methylation serves to inactivate certain genes.
In many cancers, the distribution of DNA methylation marks is profoundly altered, and there is evidence that this contributes to tumor progression. The causes and consequences of this epigenetic disruption remain however unclear.
Charles De Smet and his group discovered that alterations of DNA methylation often affect a particular group of genes, which normally display specific expression in germline cells (especially those at the origin spermatozoids in males). These genes loose methylation in many tumors, and become therefore aberrantly activated. Due to their particular expression profile, such genes were termed “cancer-germline” (CG).
Current studies in the lab aim at identifying the mechanisms that lead to loss of methylation and activation of CG genes in tumors. Further efforts are focused on the identification of genes other than CG genes that also undergo epigenetic activation in cancer. To these ends, researchers in the team rely largely on bioinformatics approaches, which allow large-scale analysis of genomes and epigenomes.
Through the identification of epigenetically altered genes, the objective is to uncover new mechanisms of tumor development. Another goal is to search for early biomarkers of the disease.
Charles De Smet obtained his Master’s degree in Biology from the Catholic University of Louvain (Belgium) in 1987. He then joined the lab of Thierry Boon at the Brussels branch of the Ludwig Cancer Institute (Belgium), where he obtained his PhD in Molecular Biology in 1993 working on the isolation and characterization of genes that encode human tumor antigen. The genes turned out to be the first examples of cancer-germline genes. Charles stayed in the same lab as a postdoctoral fellow for 5 years, investigating the role of DNA methylation in the regulation of cancer-germline genes. He then continued his postdoctoral training in the group of Prof. Webster Cavenee at the University of California San Diego (USA), where he studied gene expression changes associated with differentiation of glial progenitor cells. Back in Belgium in 2000, Charles was hired as an Assistant Member at the Ludwig Cancer Institute. He joined the de Duve Institute as a Group Leader in 2008, and became Professor at UCLouvain in 2009. In 2021, Charles was elected President of the School of Biomedical Sciences of UCLouvain.
Diacofotaki A, Loriot A, and De Smet C.
Cancers (2022) 14:1007.
Fain JS, Loriot A, Diacofotaki A, Van Tongelen A, and De Smet, C.
Sci Rep (2021) 11:17346.
De Smet C, De Backer O, Faraoni I, Lurquin C, and Boon T.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA (1996) 93: 7149-7153.