UMass Boston

Jens Rister, Associate Professor, Biology

Jens Rister

Department:
Biology
Title:
Associate Professor
Location:
ISC Floor 04

Biography

PhD in Genetics and Neurobiology under the mentorship of Martin Heisenberg (Universität Würzburg). Postdoctoral training in Claude Desplan’s lab (New York University) with support from EMBO and DFG fellowships, as well as a K99 Pathway to Independence Award from the NIH/NEI. Since 2017: Associate Member of the Dana Farber/Harvard Cancer Center Cancer Genetics program.

Area of Expertise

Molecular Biology, Developmental Genetics, Neurobiology

Degrees

PhD, Genetics and Neurobiology, University of Würzburg, Germany

Professional Publications & Contributions

Bunker, J., Bashir, M., Bailey, S., Boodram, P., Perry, A., Delaney, R., Tsachaki, M., Sprecher, S.G., Nelson, E., Call, G.B., and Rister, J. (2023). Blimp-1/PRDM1 and Hr3/RORß specify the blue-sensitive photoreceptor subtype in Drosophila by repressing the Hippo pathway.
Front. Cell Dev. Biol. 11:1058961. PMID: 36960411, PMCID: PMC10027706. 
doi: 10.3389/fcell.2023.1058961

Rister, J. and Datta, R.R. (2022). Palindrome. Editors: Stanley Maloy and Kelly Hughes. Brenner's Encyclopedia of Genetics (Second Edition), Academic Press, 2001, Page 216, ISBN 9780080961569.

Kumar M., et al. (2022). Vitamin A deficiency alters the phototransduction machinery and distinct non-vision-specific pathways in the Drosophila eye proteome.
Biomolecules,  PMID: 36008977, PMCID:  PMC9405971.
DOI: 10.3390/biom12081083

Datta, R.R. and Rister, J. (2022). The power of the (imperfect) palindrome: sequence-specific roles of palindromic motifs in gene regulation.
Bioessays, PMID: 35195290.

Dewett, D., Labaf, M., Lam-Kamath, K., Zarringhalam, K., and Rister, J. (2021). Vitamin A deficiency affects gene expression in the Drosophila melanogaster head.
G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics, PMID: 34849795.

Poupault, C., Choi, D.,  Lam-Kamath, K.,  Dewett, D., Razzaq, A., Bunker, J., Perry, A., Cho, I., and Rister, J. (2021). A combinatorial cis-regulatory logic restricts color-sensing Rhodopsins to specific photoreceptor subsets in Drosophila. PMID: 34161320.
PLOS Genetics, Jun 23;17(6):e1009613.

Dewett, D., Lam-Kamath, K., Poupault, C., Khurana, H., and Rister, J. (2021). Mechanisms of vitamin A metabolism and deficiency in the mammalian and fly visual system.
Developmental Biology 476, 68-78. PMID: 33774009.

Rister, J., Razzaq, A., Boodram, P., Desai, N., Tsanis, C., Chen, H., Jukam, D., and Desplan, C. (2015). Single base pair differences in a shared motif determine differential Rhodopsin expression.
Science 360, 6265, 1258-1261. PMID: 26785491. PMCID: PMC4919384.

Jukam, D.*, Xie, B.*, Rister, J.*, Terrell, D., Charlton-Perkins, M., Pistillo, D., Gebelein, B., Desplan, C., and Cook, T. (2013). Opposite feedbacks in the Hippo pathway for growth control and neural fate.
Science 342, 6155. PMID: 23989952. PMCID: PMC3796000.
* Equal contribution.

Rister, J., Desplan, C., and Vasiliauskas, D. (2012). Establishing and maintaining gene expression patterns: insights from sensory receptor patterning.
Development 140, 493-503. PMID: 23293281, PMCID: PMC3561783.

Rister, J., Pauls, D., Schnell, B., Ting, C.-Y., Lee, C.-H., Sinakevitch, I., Morante, J., Strausfeld, N. J., Ito, K., and Heisenberg, M. (2007). Dissection of the peripheral motion channel in the visual system of Drosophila melanogaster.
Neuron 56, 155-170. PMID: 17920022.

Additional Information

Research Interests

Higher multicellular organisms can detect a variety of environmental stimuli with their large repertoire of sensory receptor neurons. Jens Rister's lab studies the development of color-sensing photoreceptors in the Drosophila eye as a model for the cell-fate decisions that generate and maintain different sensory neuron types. For instance, in both flies and humans, each photoreceptor neuron expresses a specific color-sensing Rhodopsin/Opsin pigment that defines photoreceptor identity and function throughout the life of the organism.

The distinction of different photoreceptor types in Drosophila involves conserved regulators that have been linked to human retinopathies and cancer (e.g. the Hippo tumor suppressor pathway). To decipher the underlying mechanisms, we are pursuing a multidisciplinary approach that takes advantage of the powerful molecular genetic tools, newly developed gene editing and cell type-specific genomics techniques that Drosophila offers, in combination with live imaging and behavioral assays.

We are currently pursuing the following goals:

  • Elucidate how regulatory DNA controls where, when, and at which levels rhodopsins are expressed in subsets of color-sensing photoreceptors.
  • Generate synthetic regulatory DNA regions to reconstruct the complex rhodopsin expression patterns in vivo.
  • Identify the regulatory logic that controls the mutually exclusive expression of the tumor suppressor warts and the growth regulator melted in subsets of post-mitotic photoreceptors.

Honors

  • 2019-2023 - NIH/NEI R01 ‘Mechanisms of vitamin A deprivation and replacement therapy’
  • 2018 - UMass Boston's Endowed Career Faculty Development Award.
  • 2017-2020 -  NIH/NEI R00 Pathway to Independence Award
  • 2014-2016 - NIH/NEI K99 Pathway to Independence Award
  • 2012-2013 - German Research Foundation (DFG) fellowship
  • 2009 - Award of the ‘Unterfränkische Gedenkjahresstiftung fuer Wissenschaft’, University of Würzburg, Germany
  • 2008-2010 - EMBO long-term fellowship
  • 2008 - Biocenter Science Award, University of Würzburg, Germany