After a brief postdoc position at UCSD, Taylor joined the faculty there in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry in 1972 and became a full professor in 1985.[1] She was a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator from 1997 to 2014.[6]
Taylor's research group has focused on the structure and function of protein kinases, particularly protein kinase A, since shortly after she began her independent research career.[1] Her group, collaborating with Janusz Sowadski, was the first to solve the crystal structure of a protein kinase when they reported the structure of PKA in 1991.[7] The group has subsequently published a number of papers on the dynamics and mechanism of PKA, or cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase.[8][9][10]
^"Susan S. Taylor". Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Retrieved 14 March 2016.
^Knighton, DR; Zheng, JH; Ten Eyck, LF; Ashford, VA; Xuong, NH; Taylor, SS; Sowadski, JM (26 July 1991). "Crystal structure of the catalytic subunit of cyclic adenosine monophosphate-dependent protein kinase". Science. 253 (5018): 407–14. doi:10.1126/science.1862342. PMID1862342.
^Taylor, SS; Yang, J; Wu, J; Haste, NM; Radzio-Andzelm, E; Anand, G (11 March 2004). "PKA: a portrait of protein kinase dynamics". Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Proteins and Proteomics. 1697 (1–2): 259–69. doi:10.1016/j.bbapap.2003.11.029. PMID15023366.
^Kim, C; Xuong, NH; Taylor, SS (4 February 2005). "Crystal structure of a complex between the catalytic and regulatory (RIalpha) subunits of PKA". Science. 307 (5710): 690–6. doi:10.1126/science.1104607. PMID15692043. S2CID32156686.