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D-Index & Metrics

Molecular Biology

D-Index
61
Citations
18257
World Ranking
1883
National Ranking
938

Overview

P. Todd Stukenberg is affiliated with the University of Virginia in the United States and has contributed extensively to research in the fields of biochemistry, genetics, and molecular biology. Their scholarly work spans various subfields including molecular biology, cell biology, plant science, cancer research, and immunology.

Their research has focused on several main topics such as microtubule and mitosis dynamics, genomics and chromatin dynamics, RNA research and splicing, DNA repair mechanisms, cancer genomics and diagnostics, RNA modifications and cancer, and cancer-related molecular pathways.

Stukenberg's recent publications include:

  • Integrative single-cell meta-analysis reveals disease-relevant vascular cell states and markers in human atherosclerosis, 2023, Cell Reports
  • A Condensed View of the Chromosome Passenger Complex, 2020, Trends in Cell Biology
  • High nuclear TPX2 expression correlates with TP53 mutation and poor clinical behavior in a large breast cancer cohort, but is not an independent predictor of chromosomal instability, 2021, BMC Cancer
  • Aurora kinases: Generators of spatial control during mitosis, 2023, Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology
  • MYBL2-Driven Transcriptional Programs Link Replication Stress and Error-prone DNA Repair With Genomic Instability in Lung Adenocarcinoma, 2021, Frontiers in Oncology

Frequent co-authors collaborating with Stukenberg include:

  • E. Niedzialkowska
  • Ben E. Black
  • Luke Eldredge
  • Aamir Ali
  • Nikaela W. Bryan

Stukenberg's work has been published in numerous venues, with a concentration of publications in the following journals:

  • bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
  • Journal of Biological Chemistry
  • Molecular Biology of the Cell
  • Cell Reports
  • Trends in Cell Biology

Best Publications

  • Phosphoproteome analysis by mass spectrometry and its application to Saccharomyces cerevisiae

    Scott B Ficarro;Mark L McCleland;P Todd Stukenberg;Daniel J Burke

  • Sequence-specific and phosphorylation dependent proline isomerization: A potential mitotic regulatory mechanism

    Michael B. Yaffe;Mike Schutkowski;Minhui Shen;Xiao Zhen Zhou

  • A signalling pathway controlling c-Myc degradation that impacts oncogenic transformation of human cells

    Elizabeth Yeh;Melissa Cunningham;Hugh Arnold;Dawn Chasse

  • The Dissociation of Cohesin from Chromosomes in Prophase Is Regulated by Polo-like Kinase

    Izabela Sumara;Elisabeth Vorlaufer;P.Todd Stukenberg;Olaf Kelm

  • Aurora B Phosphorylates Centromeric MCAK and Regulates Its Localization and Microtubule Depolymerization Activity

    Weijie Lan;Xin Zhang;Susan L Kline-Smith;Sara E Rosasco

  • Histone H3 Thr-3 phosphorylation by Haspin positions Aurora B at centromeres in mitosis

    Fangwei Wang;Jun Dai;John R. Daum;Ewa Niedzialkowska

  • Mechanism of the sliding beta-clamp of DNA polymerase III holoenzyme.

    P.T. Stukenberg;P.S. Studwell-Vaughan;M. O'Donnell

  • The essential mitotic peptidyl-prolyl isomerase Pin1 binds and regulates mitosis-specific phosphoproteins.

    Minhui Shen;P. T. Stukenberg;M. W. Kirschner;Kun Ping Lu

  • Mechanism of Aurora B Activation by Incenp and Inhibition by Hesperadin

    Fabio Sessa;Marina Mapelli;Claudio Ciferri;Cataldo Tarricone

  • Inhibition of aurora B kinase blocks chromosome segregation, overrides the spindle checkpoint, and perturbs microtubule dynamics in mitosis.

    Marko J. Kallio;Mark L. McCleland;P.Todd Stukenberg;Gary J. Gorbsky

  • Midzone activation of aurora B in anaphase produces an intracellular phosphorylation gradient.

    Brian G. Fuller;Michael A. Lampson;Emily A. Foley;Sara Rosasco-Nitcher

  • Aurora B Kinase Exists in a Complex with Survivin and INCENP and Its Kinase Activity Is Stimulated by Survivin Binding and Phosphorylation

    Margaret A. Bolton;Weijie Lan;Shannon E. Powers;Mark L. McCleland

  • Protein architecture of the human kinetochore microtubule attachment site.

    Xiaohu Wan;Ryan P. O'Quinn;Heather L. Pierce;Ajit P. Joglekar

  • LIS1 regulates CNS lamination by interacting with mNudE, a central component of the centrosome.

    Yuanyi Feng;Eric C. Olson;P.Todd Stukenberg;Lisa A. Flanagan

  • Phosphorylation regulates SIRT1 function.

    Tsutomu Sasaki;Bernhard Maier;Katarzyna D. Koclega;Maksymilian Chruszcz

  • Mitotic inactivation of a human SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complex

    Sif S;Stukenberg Pt;Kirschner Mw;Kingston Re

  • Aurora B is enriched at merotelic attachment sites, where it regulates MCAK.

    Anne Lide Knowlton;Weijie Lan;P. Todd Stukenberg

  • The highly conserved Ndc80 complex is required for kinetochore assembly, chromosome congression, and spindle checkpoint activity

    Mark L. McCleland;Richard D. Gardner;Marko J. Kallio;John R. Daum

  • A mammalian Partner of inscuteable binds NuMA and regulates mitotic spindle organization.

    Quansheng Du;P. Todd Stukenberg;Ian G. Macara

  • Systematic identification of mitotic phosphoproteins.

    P.Todd Stukenberg;Kevin D. Lustig;Thomas J. McGarry;Randall W. King

Frequent Co-Authors

Gary J. Gorbsky
Gary J. Gorbsky Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation
Marc W. Kirschner
Marc W. Kirschner Harvard University
Randall W. King
Randall W. King Harvard University
Jan G. J. van de Winkel
Jan G. J. van de Winkel Genmab (United States)
David L. Brautigan
David L. Brautigan University of Virginia
Zygmunt S. Derewenda
Zygmunt S. Derewenda University of Virginia
Donald F. Hunt
Donald F. Hunt University of Virginia
Jeffrey Shabanowitz
Jeffrey Shabanowitz University of Virginia
Margaret A. Lindorfer
Margaret A. Lindorfer University of Virginia

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