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Benjamin Sabari, Ph.D.

Benjamin Sabari, Ph.D.

Titles and Appointments

Assistant Professor

School
Medical School
Department
Cecil H. and Ida Green Center for Reproductive Biology Sciences | Molecular Biology | Obstetrics and Gynecology
Graduate Programs
Genetics, Development and Disease
  • Biography

    Ben Sabari is an Assistant Professor in the Cecil H. and Ida Green Center for Reproductive Biology Sciences and Department of Molecular Biology.

    Dr. Sabari received his BS in Molecular Genetics at University of Rochester in 2010. He completed his PhD with David Allis in the Laboratory of Chromatin Biology and Epigenetics at The Rockefeller University in 2016. As a graduate student Dr. Sabari studied the regulatory role of histone post-translation modifications in transcription and gene activation. Dr. Sabari was a Damon Runyon Postdoctoral Fellow in the laboratory of Richard Young at the Whitehead Institute, where he investigated the role of phase-separated condensates in regulating gene activation. In 2020, Dr. Sabari joined the faculty at UT Southwestern.

    The primary goal of the Sabari Lab is to understand how the machinery required for gene activation is organized within the nucleus in healthy and diseased cell states. The process of gene activation requires hundreds of unique proteins and RNAs that must engage with specific DNA elements to position RNA Polymerase at a gene for transcription. We study the role of dynamic compartments called biomolecular condensates in organizing the transcriptional machinery. We investigate how nuclear condensates form at specific genomic loci, how they function to compartmentalize biochemistry, and how they are dynamically regulated. The lab focuses on the roles of protein disorder, regulatory DNA element clustering, and active processes in the formation and function of nuclear condensates. We investigate these processes in various biological contexts including adipogenesis, stem cell differentiation, and cancer. We will employ an array of tools including live cell microscopy, in vitro biochemistry, proteomics and epigenomics.

    The Sabari Lab website can be found at: https://www.sabarilab.com

  • Research Interest
    • Biomolecular condensates
    • Chromatin
    • Gene Regulation
    • Nuclear Organization
    • Transcription
  • Publications

    Star Featured Publications

    Featured Featured Featured
    The phenylalanine-and-glycine repeats of NUP98 oncofusions form condensates that selectively partition transcriptional coactivators.
    Ahn JH, Guo Y, Lyons H, Mackintosh SG, Lau BK, Edmondson RD, Byrum SD, Storey AJ, Tackett AJ, Cai L, Sabari BR, Wang GG, Mol Cell 2025 Feb 85 4 708-725.e9
    Disordered Regions of Condensate-promoting Proteins Have Distinct Molecular Signatures Associated with Cellular Function.
    Vashishtha S, Sabari BR, J Mol Biol 2025 Jan 437 5 168953
    Functional specificity in biomolecular condensates revealed by genetic complementation.
    Sabari BR, Hyman AA, Hnisz D, Nat Rev Genet 2024 Oct
    Disorder-mediated interactions target proteins to specific condensates.
    De La Cruz N, Pradhan P, Veettil RT, Conti BA, Oppikofer M, Sabari BR, Mol Cell 2024 Sep 84 18 3497-3512.e9
    Coactivator condensation drives cardiovascular cell lineage specification.
    Gan P, Eppert M, De La Cruz N, Lyons H, Shah AM, Veettil RT, Chen K, Pradhan P, Bezprozvannaya S, Xu L, Liu N, Olson EN, Sabari BR, Sci Adv 2024 Mar 10 11 eadk7160
    Phase Separation in Biology and Disease; Current Perspectives and Open Questions.
    Boeynaems S, Chong S, Gsponer J, Holt L, Milovanovic D, Mitrea DM, Mueller-Cajar O, Portz B, Reilly JF, Reinkemeier CD, Sabari BR, Sanulli S, Shorter J, Sontag E, Strader L, Stachowiak J, Weber SC, White M, Zhang H, Zweckstetter M, Elbaum-Garfinkle S, Kriwacki R, J Mol Biol 2023 Jan 167971
    Context is key: Modulated protein multivalency in disease.
    Eppert M, Sabari BR, Mol Cell 2022 Nov 82 21 3965-3967
  • Honors & Awards
    • Cancer Prevention Research Institute of Texas First Time Faculty Recruitment Award
      (2020)
    • Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow
      (2017-2020)
    • National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellow
      (2011-2014)