American evolutionary biologist
Kira S. Makarova (Russian : Кира Макарова ) is an American evolutionary biologist known for her research on the biology of CRISPR and Cas9 . She is a staff scientist at the National Center for Biotechnology Information .
Early life and education
Makarova grew up in Narva , then part of the Soviet Union and later in Estonia , and competed at the national level in the Soviet Biology Olympiad. After completing high school she tried unsuccessfully for several years to enter Moscow State University . She instead entered the Moscow Medical Institute , but after marrying and having a child she moved to Novosibirsk State University to be closer to her husband's family. There, the shortages of laboratory supplies led her to work in computational biology . She completed a master's degree in 1991,[ 1] and in 1996 completed a doctorate at the Institute of Cytology and Genetics of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Novosibirsk.[ 2] Her work at the institute involved the design of synthetic oligonucleotides and, separately, the use of oligopeptide frequency data to classify proteins .[ 1]
Later career and research
When Makarova's husband moved to the US to work with Eugene Koonin in the National Center for Biotechnology Information , Koonin found Makarova a position as research fellow at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences , studying Deinococcus radiodurans , a bacterium that can survive several different extreme conditions. In 2001, Koonin hired Makarova to join him at NCBI. At the center, beginning in 2006, Makarova and her co-workers investigated the CRISPR-Cas9 system and its biological function as a bacterial immune system . Interest in the system heightened after other researchers subsequently used it to perform genome editing .[ 3] [ 4]
Makarova's ongoing research involves comparative genomics , and the genetics and protein functions of archaea . She is the maintainer of a database of archaeal proteins and their relations.[ 1]
Notable publications
Zetsche, Bernd; Gootenberg, Jonathan S.; Abudayyeh, Omar O.; Slaymaker, Ian M.; Makarova, Kira S. ; Essletzbichler, Patrick; Volz, Sara E.; Joung, Julia; van der Oost, John; Regev, Aviv; Koonin, Eugene V. ; Zhang, Feng (2015). "Cpf1 Is a Single RNA-Guided Endonuclease of a Class 2 CRISPR-Cas System" . Cell . 163 (3). Cell Press : 759– 771. doi :10.1016/j.cell.2015.09.038 . ISSN 0092-8674 . PMC 4638220 . PMID 26422227 . S2CID 3628765 .
References
^ a b c McKay, Kathryn (January 8, 2018), "Focus on NLM Scientists: Dr. Kira Makarova Makes Her Mark" , NLM in Focus: A look inside the US National Library of Medicine , National Library of Medicine, retrieved 2019-09-23
^ "Kira S. Makarova, PhD" , Research staff , National Center for Biotechnology Information, retrieved 2019-09-23
^ CRISPR Timeline , Broad Institute, 25 September 2015, retrieved 2019-09-23
^ Lander, Eric S. (January 2016), "The Heroes of CRISPR" (PDF) , Cell , 164 (1– 2), Elsevier {BV}: 18– 28, doi :10.1016/j.cell.2015.12.041 , PMID 26771483
External links