Our lab studies how environmental exposures shape human biology through epigenetic regulation. Environmental factors—such as climate change, diet, pollution, stress, and lifestyle—can induce epigenetic modifications that alter gene regulation without changing DNA sequence. We investigate how these environmentally driven epigenetic changes influence biological processes and downstream health outcomes.

By integrating epigenomic, environmental, and phenotypic data, our research seeks to uncover the molecular mechanisms linking environmental change to human health. This work aims to improve understanding of disease etiology, biological adaptation, and long-term exposure effects, with implications for prevention strategies, intervention design, and public health policy.