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Dive into the research topics where Kristin A. Krukenberg is active.

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Featured researches published by Kristin A. Krukenberg.


F1000Research | 2014

Shaping the Future of Research: a perspective from junior scientists

Gary S. McDowell; Kearney T. W. Gunsalus; Drew C. MacKellar; Sarah A. Mazzilli; Vaibhav P. Pai; Patricia R. Goodwin; Erica M. Walsh; Avi Robinson-Mosher; Thomas A. Bowman; James Kraemer; Marcella L. Erb; Eldi Schoenfeld; Leila Shokri; Jonathan D. Jackson; Ayesha Islam; Matthew D. Mattozzi; Kristin A. Krukenberg; Jessica K. Polka

The landscape of scientific research and funding is in flux as a result of tight budgets, evolving models of both publishing and evaluation, and questions about training and workforce stability. As future leaders, junior scientists are uniquely poised to shape the culture and practice of science in response to these challenges. A group of postdocs in the Boston area who are invested in improving the scientific endeavor, planned a symposium held on October 2 nd and 3 rd, 2014, as a way to join the discussion about the future of US biomedical research. Here we present a report of the proceedings of participant-driven workshops and the organizers’ synthesis of the outcomes.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2012

Large-scale preparation and characterization of poly(ADP-ribose) and defined length polymers

Edwin S. Tan; Kristin A. Krukenberg; Timothy J. Mitchison

Poly(ADP-ribose) (pADPr) is a large, structurally complex polymer of repeating ADP-ribose units. It is biosynthesized from NAD⁺ by poly(ADP-ribose) polymerases (PARPs) and degraded to ADP-ribose by poly(ADP-ribose) glycohydrolase. pADPr is involved in many cellular processes and exerts biological function through covalent modification and noncovalent binding to specific proteins. Very little is known about molecular recognition and structure-activity relationships for noncovalent interaction between pADPr and its binding proteins, in part because of lack of access to the polymer on a large scale and to units of defined lengths. We prepared polydisperse pADPr from PARP1 and tankyrase 1 at the hundreds of milligram scale by optimizing enzymatic synthesis and scaling up chromatographic purification methods. We developed and calibrated an anion exchange chromatography method to assign pADPr size and scaled it up to purify defined length polymers on the milligram scale. Furthermore, we present a pADPr profiling method to characterize the polydispersity of pADPr produced by PARPs under different reaction conditions and find that substrate proteins affect the pADPr size distribution. These methods will facilitate structural and biochemical studies of pADPr and its binding proteins.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2015

A call for transparency in tracking student and postdoc career outcomes

Jessica K. Polka; Kristin A. Krukenberg; Gary S. McDowell

There is a common misconception that the United States is suffering from a “STEM shortage,” a dearth of graduates with scientific, technological, engineering, and mathematical backgrounds. In biomedical science, however, we are likely suffering from the opposite problem and could certainly better tailor training to actual career outcomes. At the Future of Research Symposium, various workshops identified this as a key issue in a pipeline traditionally geared toward academia. Proposals for reform all ultimately come up against the same problem: there is a shocking lack of data at institutional and national levels on the size, shape, and successful careers of participants in the research workforce. In this paper, we call for improved institutional reporting of the number of graduate students and postdocs and their training and career outcomes.


Chemistry & Biology | 2015

Extracellular Poly(ADP-Ribose) Is a Pro-inflammatory Signal for Macrophages

Kristin A. Krukenberg; Sujeong Kim; Edwin S. Tan; Zoltan Maliga; Timothy J. Mitchison

Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase 1 (PARP1) synthesizes poly(ADP-ribose) (PAR), an essential post-translational modification whose function is important in many cellular processes including DNA damage signaling, cell death, and inflammation. All known PAR biology is intracellular, but we suspected it might also play a role in cell-to-cell communication during inflammation. We found that PAR activated cytokine release in human and mouse macrophages, a hallmark of innate immune activation, and determined structure-activity relationships. PAR was rapidly internalized by murine macrophages, while the monomer, ADP-ribose, was not. Inhibitors of Toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2) and TLR4 signaling blocked macrophage responses to PAR, and PAR induced TLR2 and TLR4 signaling in reporter cell lines suggesting it was recognized by these TLRs, much like bacterial pathogens. We propose that PAR acts as an extracellular damage associated molecular pattern that drives inflammatory signaling.


Cell Reports | 2014

Basal Activity of a PARP1-NuA4 Complex Varies Dramatically across Cancer Cell Lines

Kristin A. Krukenberg; Ruomu Jiang; Judith A. Steen; Timothy J. Mitchison

Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerases (PARPs) catalyze poly(ADP-ribose) addition onto proteins, an important posttranslational modification involved in transcription, DNA damage repair, and stem cell identity. Previous studies established the activation of PARP1 in response to DNA damage, but little is known about PARP1 regulation outside of DNA repair. We developed an assay for measuring PARP activity in cell lysates and found that the basal activity of PARP1 was highly variable across breast cancer cell lines, independent of DNA damage. Sucrose gradient fractionation demonstrated that PARP1 existed in at least three biochemically distinct states in both high- and low-activity lines. A discovered complex containing the NuA4 chromatin-remodeling complex and PARP1 was responsible for high basal PARP1 activity, and NuA4 subunits were required for this activity. These findings present a pathway for PARP1 activation and a direct link between PARP1 and chromatin remodeling outside of the DNA damage response.


postdoc Journal | 2014

The Future of Research Symposium: Facilitating Postdoctoral Involvement in the Future of Science

Gary S. McDowell; Kristin A. Krukenberg; Jessica K. Polka

The scientific enterprise is facing a series of challenges that will directly impact the careers of postdocs both presently and in the future. A growing body of literature and correspondence highlights the concerns that are felt by many senior researchers and policy-makers in the academic and wider research community. However, the involvement of postdoctoral researchers in this discussion has so far been minimal and isolated. A symposium is being organized in Boston October 2-3, 2014, which aims to give postdoctoral researchers an opportunity to express their concerns, discuss the issues that scientific research is currently facing, and come together to present to the wider research community a united voice on our views of the action required to promote the scientific endeavor.


Cell Metabolism | 2018

Quantitative Analysis of NAD Synthesis-Breakdown Fluxes

Ling Liu; Xiaoyang Su; William J. Quinn; Sheng Hui; Kristin A. Krukenberg; David W. Frederick; Philip Redpath; Le Zhan; Karthikeyani Chellappa; Eileen White; Marie E. Migaud; Timothy J. Mitchison; Joseph A. Baur; Joshua D. Rabinowitz


Science | 2014

Making science a desirable career

Jessica K. Polka; Kristin A. Krukenberg


The Winnower | 2014

Logistics of Organizing the FOR Symposium

Sarah A. Mazzilli; Kearney T. W. Gunsalus; Gary S. McDowell; Kristin A. Krukenberg; Jessica K. Polka


F1000Research | 2014

The future of research symposium

Gary S. McDowell; Kristin A. Krukenberg; Jessica K. Polka

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Eldi Schoenfeld

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Erica M. Walsh

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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