Karen E Strunk

Karen E Strunk
  • Ph.D.
  • Instructor at University of Colorado Boulder

About

18
Publications
1,209
Reads
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880
Citations
Current institution
University of Colorado Boulder
Current position
  • Instructor
Additional affiliations
January 2010 - present
Central New Mexico Community College
Position
  • Instructor of Biology
Description
  • Courses taught include: Non-majors Biology (lecture and lab), Introductory Biology (lecture and lab), Anatomy and Physiology (lecture and lab), Microbiology (lecture and lab), Genetics (lecture).
August 1995 - December 2002
Vanderbilt University
Position
  • PhD Student
January 2006 - December 2009
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Position
  • SPIRE postdoctoral fellow
Education
August 1995 - December 2002
Vanderbilt University
Field of study
  • Cell and Developmental Biology

Publications

Publications (18)
Article
Full-text available
MerTK, a receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) of the TYRO3/AXL/MerTK family, is expressed in myeloid lineage cells in which it acts to suppress proinflammatory cytokines following ingestion of apoptotic material. Using syngeneic mouse models of breast cancer, melanoma, and colon cancer, we found that tumors grew slowly and were poorly metastatic in MerTK...
Article
Full-text available
Mammary glands harbor a profound burden of apoptotic cells (ACs) during post-lactational involution, but little is known regarding mechanisms by which ACs are cleared from the mammary gland, or consequences if this process is interrupted. We investigated AC clearance, also termed efferocytosis, during post-lactational remodeling, using mice deficie...
Article
Data concerning the prognostic value of ErbB4 in breast cancer and effects on cell growth have varied in published reports, perhaps due to the unknown signaling consequences of expression of the intracellular proteolytic ErbB4 s80HER4 fragment or due to differing signaling capabilities of alternatively spliced ErbB4 isoforms. One isoform (Cyt1) con...
Article
The ErbB receptor tyrosine kinase family has often been associated with increased growth of breast epithelial cells, as well as malignant transformation and progression. In contrast, ErbB4/HER4 exhibits unique attributes from a two step proteolytic cleavage which releases an 80 kilodalton, nuclear localizing, tyrosine kinase to a signal transductio...
Article
Homozygosity for the Egfr(tm1Mag) null allele in mice leads to genetic background dependent placental abnormalities and embryonic lethality. Molecular mechanisms or genetic modifiers that differentiate strains with surviving versus non-surviving Egfr nullizygous embryos have yet to be identified. Egfr transcripts in wildtype placenta were quantifie...
Article
Heregulin-mediated activation of HER4 initiates receptor cleavage (releasing an 80-kDa HER4 intracellular domain, s80(HER4), containing nuclear localization sequences) and results in G(2)-M delay by unknown signaling mechanisms. We report herein that s80(HER4) contains a functional cyclin B-like sequence known as a D-box, which targets proteins for...
Article
HER4 expression in human breast cancers correlates with a positive prognosis. While heregulin inhibits the growth of HER4-positive breast cancer cells, it does so by undefined mechanisms. We demonstrate that heregulin-induced HER4 activity inhibits cell proliferation and delays G(2)/M progression of breast cancer cells. While investigating pathways...
Article
Full-text available
The timing of lethality caused by homozygosity for a null allele of the epidermal growth factor receptor (Egfrtm1Mag) in mice is strongly dependent on genetic background. Initial attempts to genetically map background modifiers using Swiss-derived, outbred CD-1 mice were unsuccessful. To investigate the genetic architecture contributing to survival...
Article
Mice heterozygous for the N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea-induced Waved-5 (Wa5) mutation, isolated in a screen for dominant, visible mutations, exhibit a wavy coat similar to mice homozygous for the recessive Tgfa wa1 or Egfr wa2 alleles. In this study, we show that Wa5 is a new allele of Egfr (Egfr Wa5) containing a missense mutation within the coding regio...
Article
This study presents the annotated genomic sequence and exon-intron organization of the human and mouse epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) genes located on chromosomes 7p11.2 and 11, respectively. We report that the EGFR gene spans nearly 200 kb and that the full-length 170-kDa EGFR is encoded by 28 exons. In addition, we have identified two hu...
Article
Full-text available
Pax1 and QmyoD are early sclerotome and myotome-specific genes that are activated in epithelial somites of quail embryos in response to axial notochord/neural tube signals. In situ hybridization experiments reveal that the developmental kinetics of activation of pax1 and QmyoD differ greatly, suggesting that myotome and sclerotome specification are...
Article
Full-text available
Microsurgical, tissue grafting and in situ hybridization techniques have been used to investigate the role of the neural tube and notochord in the control of the myogenic bHLH genes, QmyoD, Qmyf5, Qmyogenin and the cardiac alpha-actin gene, during somite formation in stage 12 quail embryos. Our results reveal that signals from the axial neural tube...

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