Epigenetic Mechanisms in Cancer


Our laboratory is dedicated to studying the epigenetic mechanisms in cancer. We are specifically focused on understanding the functional role of arginine citrullination in transcriptional plasticity in cancer.

We aim to understand how the arginine citrullination regulates the transcription events and immune hijacking to provide better therapeutic approaches for cancer patients

Transcription regulation by RNA polymerase II is a fundamental process that is guided by tissue-specific transcription factors. These factors play a critical role in proliferation, cell identity, and function, and their dysregulation contributes to oncogenesis and drug resistance. Understanding the molecular mechanisms that regulate the recruitment of protein complexes to the transcription machinery is therefore essential for deciphering the fundamental processes underlying these pathological conditions.

Post-translational modifications of chromatin, including arginine citrullination, are crucial components of gene regulation mechanisms. Arginine citrullination is the conversion of arginine to the non-coded amino acid citrulline, catalyzed by a family of enzymes called peptidyl arginine deiminases (PADIs). We are deciphering the molecular mechanisms by which PADIs-mediated citrullination coordinates with transcriptional events at multiple levels and dictates transcriptional plasticity and immune regulation in cancer.


Given our expertise in the field of arginine citrullination and transcription regulation, we are intrigued to elucidate how arginine citrullination implicates the distinct stages of transcriptional events in cancer. Using advanced multidisciplinary approaches inclusive of single-cell omics, microscopy, proteomics, and the CRISPR-Cas9 method along with structural knowledge, we aim to gain a comprehensive understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying this process. In combination, we are using functional approaches to translate this fundamental knowledge to provide better therapeutic strategies for cancer patients.

Team members

Research Scientist

Priyanka Sharma (Inserm)

Amal Rabaaoui (ATER Toulouse University)

Research Engineer

Maria Fidelia Susanto

Master Student

Anuksha Kamath (EUR CARe)

PhD Student

Diksha Attrish (France Excellence Eiffel)

Patil et al. (2025) The citrullinating enzyme PADI4 governs progenitor cell proliferation and translation in developing hair follicles. Sci Adv

Tomita et al. (2025) Citrullination in tumor metastasis, inside and outside the cells. Cancer Sci

Villanueva-Cañas et al. (2024) Evolutionary analysis reveals the role of a non-catalytic domain of PADI2 in transcriptional regulation. iScience

Beato & Sharma. (2020) Peptidyl arginine deiminase 2 (PADI2)-mediated arginine citrullination modulates transcription in cancer. Int J Mol Sci

Sharma et al. (2018) Arginine citrullination at the C-terminal domain controls RNA Polymerase II transcription. Mol Cell

Surface representation of peptidyl arginine deiminase 2 with the consensus interface with the P-TEFb (positive transcription elongation factor b) complex derived from AlphaFold-Multimer and docking structural models highlighted in red and Leucine 162 in blue.