John Kuriyan

John Kuriyan

Professor of Chemistry & Molecular and Cell Biology

email: kuriyan@berkeley.edu
office: 508 B Stanley Hall
phone: 510.643.0137, 510.643.1710 (Admin)
fax: 510.643.2352
lab: 542, 527 Stanley Hall
lab phone: 510.643.0166, 510.643.0164

Research Group
Recent Publications


Research Interests

Structural Biology of Cellular Signal Transduction and DNA Replication

John Kuriyan’s lab studies the mechanisms, evolution, and structures of the molecular switches that carry out cellular signal transduction. They use biochemical, biophysical, structural and cell biological analyses to elucidate mechanisms, and also study how these mechanisms change with evolution. A major focus of the lab is to understand the allosteric communication that enables proteins to be exquisitely responsive to input signals. We use high-throughput mutational analysis to determine the sensitivity of these mechanisms to perturbations, in order to determine the molecular principles governing regulation and specificity.

Breakthroughs from the lab have included the determination of the switching mechanisms of several tyrosine kinases, including that of the Src family of tyrosine kinases, the immune-cell kinases ZAP-70 and Btk, and the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). We have also advanced the fundamental understanding of the regulation of several other signaling proteins, including the Ras activator SOS, and CaMKII, an oligomeric kinase that plays a central role in neuronal signaling. Our insights have helped understand how the misregulation of these enzymes is often coupled to cancer and immune diseases, and have implications for the development of kinase-targeted drugs to treat these diseases.

The lab has also made fundamental discoveries related to the structural basis for high-speed DNA replication, by determining the structures of the clamp-loader and sliding clamp complexes of DNA polymerases. We are currently applying high-throughput mutagenesis methods to these systems to understand the functioning of the AAA+ ATPases that form the core of the clamp-loader complexes.

Biography

Dr. Kuriyan is also Chancellor's Professor at the University of California, Berkeley. He received a B.S. degree in chemistry from Juniata College, Pennsylvania, and a Ph.D. degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he worked with Gregory Petsko and Martin Karplus (Harvard University) on the dynamics of proteins. He continued with Martin Karplus and Greg Petsko for a year and then moved to Rockefeller as Assistant Professor and University Fellow. Dr. Kuriyan is a member of the National Academy of Sciences.