Yazgan, O. and J.E. Krebs (2011). Mitochondrial and nuclear genomic integrity after oxidative damage in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Accepted, Frontiers in Bioscience.
Barnett, C. and J.E. Krebs (2011). WSTF does it all: a multifunctional protein in transcription, repair and replication. Biochemistry and Cell Biology 89(1):12-23.
Harrison, B., O. Yazgan and J.E. Krebs (2009). Life without RNAi: Non-coding RNAs and their functions in S. cerevisiae. Biochemistry and Cell Biology 87(5):767-79.
Humpal, S.E., D.A. Robinson, and J.E. Krebs (2009). Marks to stop the clock: histone modifications and checkpoint regulation in the DNA damage response. Biochemistry and Cell Biology 87(1):243-53.
Krebs, J. E. (2007). Moving marks: Dynamic histone modifications in yeast. Molecular Biosystems 3(9): 590-7.
Yazgan, O. and J. E. Krebs (2007). Non-coding but non-expendable: transcriptional regulation by large noncoding RNA in eukaryotes. Biochemistry and Cell Biology 85(4): 484-96.
Brown, E., S. Malakar and J. E. Krebs (2007). How many remodelers does it take to make a brain? Diverse and cooperative roles of ATP-dependent remodeling complexes in development. Biochemistry and Cell Biology 85(4): 444-62.
Moore, J. D., O. Yazgan, Y. Ataian and J. E. Krebs (2007). Diverse roles for histone H2A modifications in different DNA damage response pathways. Genetics 176(1): 15-25.
Papamichos-Chronakis, M., J. E. Krebs and C. L. Peterson (2006). Interplay between Ino80 and Swr1 chromatin remodeling enzymes regulates cell cycle checkpoint adaptation in response to DNA damage. Genes & Development 20:2437-2449.
Ataian, Y. and J. E. Krebs (2006) Five repair pathways in one context: chromatin modification during DNA repair. Biochemistry and Cell Biology 84(4): 409-504.
Uffenbeck, S. G. and J. E. Krebs (2006). The role of chromatin structure in regulating stress-induced transcription in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Biochemistry and Cell Biology 84(4): 477-489.
Dirscherl, S.S., J. J. Henry and J. E. Krebs (2005). Neural and eye-specific defects associated with loss of the Imitation Switch (ISWI) chromatin remodeler in Xenopus laevis. Mechanisms of Development 122(11): 1157-1170.
Kuo, Hui-Ching, J.D. Moore and J.E. Krebs (2005). Histone H2A and Spt10 cooperate to regulate induction and autoregulation of the CUP1 metallothionein. Journal of Biological Chemistry 280(1): 104-111.
Dirscherl, S.S. and J.E. Krebs (2004). Functional specialization of ISWI remodeling complexes. Biochemistry and Cell Biology 82(4): 482-489.
Moore, J.D. and J.E. Krebs (2004). Histone modifications and double strand break repair. Biochemistry and Cell Biology 82(4): 446-452.
Jaskelioff, M., S. Van Komen, J.E. Krebs, P. Sung and C.L. Peterson (2002). Rad54p is a chromatin remodeling enzyme required for heteroduplex DNA joint formation with chromatin. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 278 (11): 9212-9218.
Krebs, J. E., C. J. Fry, M. Samuels and C. L. Peterson (2000). A global role for chromatin remodeling in mitotic gene expression. Cell 102: 587-598.
Krebs, J. E. and C. L. Peterson (2000). Understanding "active" chromatin: A historical perspective of chromatin remodeling. Critical Reviews in Eukaryotic Gene Expression 10(1): 1-12.
Krebs, J. E., M.-H. Kuo, C. D. Allis and C. L. Peterson (1999). Cell cycle-regulated histone acetylation required for expression of the yeast HO gene. Genes & Development 13: 1412-1421.
Krebs, J. E. and M. Dunaway (1998). The scs and scs insulator elements impart a cis requirement on enhancer-promoter interactions. Molecular Cell 1(2): 301-308.
Krebs, J. E. and M. Dunaway (1996). DNA length is a critical parameter for eukaryotic transcription in vivo. Molecular and Cellular Biology 16: 5821-5829.