Dr Dylan Bergen
Expertise
Current positions
Research Associate (Versus Athritis Fellow)
Bristol Medical School (THS)
Contact
Media contact
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Research interests
I am interested in how the skeleton (cartilage/bone) is formed. The skeleton defines the shape of an organism and gives protection to vital organs (e.g. brain, lungs, and heart). In bone and cartilage elements, matrix is laid down in a specific way giving these skeletal tissues their specific characteristics (e.g. cartilage is spongy, bone is mineralised). Healthy bone is constantly remodelled (the complete human skeleton is slowly regenerated over ten years) to repair microfractures caused by loading of bone. This depends on a fine balance of bone building cells (osteoblasts and osteocytes) and bone degrading cells (osteoclasts) to maintain the right amount of bone.
The most common bone disease is osteoporosis which is diagnosed by assessing bone mineral caused using a DXA scan. Low bone mineral density is the parameter to diagnose osteoporosis, which affects ~50% of women and ~33% of men above the age of 55. Low bone mineral density is caused by a reduction in bone matrix caused by an altered balance of bone building cells and bone degrading cells. This results in brittle (porous) bones that fracture easily leading to serious, sometimes even life threatening, fractures in the hip, vertebrae, and long bones (ribs, femur etc.).
To better understand the biology of osteoporosis, my research makes use of large human genomic datasets (genome wide association studies, whole exome sequencing) to identify important genetic factors in the population that alter bone mineral density. I aim to find new osteoanabolic (stimulating osteoblasts and bone strength) genetic factors as current treatment options for osteoporosis mainly block osteocatabolic (osteoclasts à bone degrading) pathways. These unfortunately do not fully recover bone mineral density and bone strength.
Large human genomic datasets of bone mineral density offer a great way to identify new bone mineral density genes however, these strategies produce 100s of potential genes. I am currently concluding a prioritisation pipeline to select the best candidates for studies in the lab, using the zebrafish model. The zebrafish allow relatively fast screening of these identified genes in a cost-effective way. I am working on the second part of the pipeline that involves zebrafish experiments to define the best osteoanabolic gene from these large human genomic studies.
I aim to use my scientific interest in the skeleton to integrate large genomic studies and functional studies in the lab, to define putative drug targets for osteoporosis.
Positions
University of Bristol positions
Research Associate (Versus Athritis Fellow)
Bristol Medical School (THS)
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
Functional validation of novel osteo-anabolic factors in the zebrafish
Principal Investigator
Description
I will study genes derived from my in silico prioritisation pipeline as part of my Foundation Fellowship from Versus Arthritis.Managing organisational unit
Bristol Medical School (THS)Dates
01/04/2019
In silico prioritisation of genes that underpin osteoporosis
Principal Investigator
Description
The aim of this project is to identify new genes that regulate bone mineral density identified in humans using two large genetic studies. Funded by Elizabeth Blackwell Institute, Postgraduate Extension…Managing organisational unit
Bristol Medical School (THS)Dates
01/09/2017
A dual role for the Golgi matrix protein giantin in extracellular matrix secretion and cilia function
Principal Investigator
Role
Student
Description
The Golgi complex is a processing centre within the biosynthetic secretory pathway, essential for the delivery and production of functional extracellular matrix (ECM), including collagen and proteoglycans. Those large cargoes…Managing organisational unit
School of BiochemistryDates
01/10/2012 to 14/11/2017
Publications
Recent publications
13/02/2021Pharmacological Manipulation of Early Zebrafish Skeletal Development Shows an Important Role for Smad9 in Control of Skeletal Progenitor Populations
A rare mutation in SMAD9 associated with high bone mass identifies the SMAD-dependent BMP signalling pathway as a potential anabolic target for osteoporosis
Journal of Bone and Mineral Research
Zebrafish as an emerging model for osteoporosis
Frontiers in Endocrinology
Regulator of calcineurin-2 is a centriolar protein with a role in cilia length control
Journal of Cell Science
Giantin-knockout models reveal a feedback loop between Golgi function and glycosyltransferase expression
Journal of Cell Science