She is the William E. Ford professor of biochemistry and head of the Laboratory of Membrane Biology and Biophysics at the Rockefeller University and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator.
[1][2] She earned a bachelor's degree in chemistry from Ohio University in 1993, and went on to pursue a PhD in biochemistry from Harvard University in 1998 under the mentorship of Don C. Wiley,[3] where she discovered unique structural features of the influenza virus responsible for infection [4][5][6] Chen remained in Don C. Wiley's lab as a postdoctoral researcher before moving on to a postdoctoral fellowship at Baylor College of Medicine from 1999 to 2001 in the lab of Florante A. Quiocho,[3] where she started studying the ATP binding cassette transporters[7] In 2002, Chen became an assistant professor at Purdue University where she won a number of teaching awards and published her research in high impact journals.
In 2003 she was named a Pew Scholar and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator in 2008 [9] In 2014, she moved to The Rockefeller University,[10] where she is now the William E. Ford Professor and Head of Laboratory of Membrane Biology and Biophysics.
Her work on ABC transporters includes investigating their role in resistance to chemotherapy drugs; antigen presentation in adaptive immunity and viral infection; cystic fibrosis; and bacterial nutrition.
Among the thousands of ABC transporters, one member, the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), has evolved to function as an ATP-gated ion channel.