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Dive into the research topics where Shane J. Cronin is active.

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Featured researches published by Shane J. Cronin.


Science | 2009

Genome-wide RNAi screen identifies genes involved in intestinal pathogenic bacterial infection.

Shane J. Cronin; Nadine T. Nehme; Stefanie Limmer; Samuel Liégeois; J. Andrew Pospisilik; Daniel Schramek; Ricardo de Matos Simoes; Susanne Gruber; Urszula Puc; Ingo Ebersberger; Tamara Zoranovic; G. Gregory Neely; Arndt von Haeseler; Dominique Ferrandon; Josef M. Penninger

Innate Immunity in the Fly Gut Drosophila melanogaster is an important model system to study innate immunity, being both easy to manipulate and lacking an adaptive immune system. In order to identify genes that regulate innate immunity, Cronin et al. (p. 340; published online 11 June) performed an RNA interference screen on flies infected with the oral bacterial pathogen, Serratia marcescens. Genes involved in intestinal immunity and regulation of hemocytes, macrophage-like cells critical for phagocytosis and killing of the bacteria, were identified. Several hundred genes conferred either enhanced susceptibility or resistance to bacterial infection. Furthermore, the JAK/STAT signaling pathway was activated in intestinal stem cells after bacterial infection, resulting in enhanced susceptibility to infection, most likely through regulation of intestinal stem cell homeostasis. In vivo RNA interference screen reveals regulators of innate immunity in Drosophila. Innate immunity represents the first line of defense in animals. We report a genome-wide in vivo Drosophila RNA interference screen to uncover genes involved in susceptibility or resistance to intestinal infection with the bacterium Serratia marcescens. We first employed whole-organism gene suppression, followed by tissue-specific silencing in gut epithelium or hemocytes to identify several hundred genes involved in intestinal antibacterial immunity. Among the pathways identified, we showed that the JAK-STAT signaling pathway controls host defense in the gut by regulating stem cell proliferation and thus epithelial cell homeostasis. Therefore, we revealed multiple genes involved in antibacterial defense and the regulation of innate immunity.


Cell | 2010

Drosophila Genome-wide Obesity Screen Reveals Hedgehog as a Determinant of Brown versus White Adipose Cell Fate

J. Andrew Pospisilik; Daniel Schramek; Harald Schnidar; Shane J. Cronin; Nadine T. Nehme; Xiaoyun Zhang; Claude Knauf; Patrice D. Cani; Karin Aumayr; Jelena Todoric; Martina Bayer; Arvand Haschemi; Vijitha Puviindran; Krisztina Tar; Michael Orthofer; G. Gregory Neely; Georg Dietzl; Armen S. Manoukian; Martin Funovics; Gerhard Prager; Oswald Wagner; Dominique Ferrandon; Fritz Aberger; Chi-chung Hui; Harald Esterbauer; Josef M. Penninger

Over 1 billion people are estimated to be overweight, placing them at risk for diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and cancer. We performed a systems-level genetic dissection of adiposity regulation using genome-wide RNAi screening in adult Drosophila. As a follow-up, the resulting approximately 500 candidate obesity genes were functionally classified using muscle-, oenocyte-, fat-body-, and neuronal-specific knockdown in vivo and revealed hedgehog signaling as the top-scoring fat-body-specific pathway. To extrapolate these findings into mammals, we generated fat-specific hedgehog-activation mutant mice. Intriguingly, these mice displayed near total loss of white, but not brown, fat compartments. Mechanistically, activation of hedgehog signaling irreversibly blocked differentiation of white adipocytes through direct, coordinate modulation of early adipogenic factors. These findings identify a role for hedgehog signaling in white/brown adipocyte determination and link in vivo RNAi-based scanning of the Drosophila genome to regulation of adipocyte cell fate in mammals.


Cell | 2010

A Genome-wide Drosophila Screen for Heat Nociception Identifies α2δ3 as an Evolutionarily Conserved Pain Gene

G. Gregory Neely; Andreas Hess; Michael Costigan; Alex C. Keene; Spyros Goulas; Michiel Langeslag; Robert S. Griffin; Inna Belfer; Feng Dai; Shad B. Smith; Luda Diatchenko; Vaijayanti Gupta; Cui ping Xia; Sabina Amann; Silke Kreitz; Cornelia Heindl-Erdmann; Susanne Wolz; Cindy V. Ly; Suchir Arora; Rinku Sarangi; Debasis Dan; Maria Novatchkova; Mark R. Rosenzweig; Dustin G. Gibson; Darwin Truong; Daniel Schramek; Tamara Zoranovic; Shane J. Cronin; Belinda Angjeli; Kay Brune

Worldwide, acute, and chronic pain affects 20% of the adult population and represents an enormous financial and emotional burden. Using genome-wide neuronal-specific RNAi knockdown in Drosophila, we report a global screen for an innate behavior and identify hundreds of genes implicated in heat nociception, including the α2δ family calcium channel subunit straightjacket (stj). Mice mutant for the stj ortholog CACNA2D3 (α2δ3) also exhibit impaired behavioral heat pain sensitivity. In addition, in humans, α2δ3 SNP variants associate with reduced sensitivity to acute noxious heat and chronic back pain. Functional imaging in α2δ3 mutant mice revealed impaired transmission of thermal pain-evoked signals from the thalamus to higher-order pain centers. Intriguingly, in α2δ3 mutant mice, thermal pain and tactile stimulation triggered strong cross-activation, or synesthesia, of brain regions involved in vision, olfaction, and hearing.


Nature | 2014

The E3 ligase Cbl-b and TAM receptors regulate cancer metastasis via natural killer cells

Magdalena Paolino; Axel Choidas; Stephanie Wallner; Blanka Pranjic; Iris Uribesalgo; Stefanie Loeser; Amanda M. Jamieson; Wallace Y. Langdon; Fumiyo Ikeda; Juan Pablo Fededa; Shane J. Cronin; Roberto Nitsch; Carsten Schultz-Fademrecht; Jan Eickhoff; Sascha Menninger; Anke Unger; Robert Torka; Thomas Gruber; Reinhard Hinterleitner; Gottfried Baier; Dominik Wolf; Axel Ullrich; Bert Klebl; Josef M. Penninger

Tumour metastasis is the primary cause of mortality in cancer patients and remains the key challenge for cancer therapy. New therapeutic approaches to block inhibitory pathways of the immune system have renewed hopes for the utility of such therapies. Here we show that genetic deletion of the E3 ubiquitin ligase Cbl-b (casitas B-lineage lymphoma-b) or targeted inactivation of its E3 ligase activity licenses natural killer (NK) cells to spontaneously reject metastatic tumours. The TAM tyrosine kinase receptors Tyro3, Axl and Mer (also known as Mertk) were identified as ubiquitylation substrates for Cbl-b. Treatment of wild-type NK cells with a newly developed small molecule TAM kinase inhibitor conferred therapeutic potential, efficiently enhancing anti-metastatic NK cell activity in vivo. Oral or intraperitoneal administration using this TAM inhibitor markedly reduced murine mammary cancer and melanoma metastases dependent on NK cells. We further report that the anticoagulant warfarin exerts anti-metastatic activity in mice via Cbl-b/TAM receptors in NK cells, providing a molecular explanation for a 50-year-old puzzle in cancer biology. This novel TAM/Cbl-b inhibitory pathway shows that it might be possible to develop a ‘pill’ that awakens the innate immune system to kill cancer metastases.


Nature Medicine | 2007

The E3 ligase HACE1 is a critical chromosome 6q21 tumor suppressor involved in multiple cancers

Liyong Zhang; Michael S. Anglesio; Maureen J. O'Sullivan; Fan Zhang; Ge Yang; Mai P. Nghiem; Shane J. Cronin; Hiromitsu Hara; Nataliya Melnyk; Liheng Li; Teiji Wada; Peter Liu; Jason E. Farrar; Robert J. Arceci; Poul H. Sorensen; Josef M. Penninger

Transformation and cancer growth are regulated by the coordinate actions of oncogenes and tumor suppressors. Here, we show that the novel E3 ubiquitin ligase HACE1 is frequently downregulated in human tumors and maps to a region of chromosome 6q21 implicated in multiple human cancers. Genetic inactivation of HACE1 in mice results in the development of spontaneous, late-onset cancer. A second hit from either environmental triggers or genetic heterozygosity of another tumor suppressor, p53, markedly increased tumor incidence in a Hace1-deficient background. Re-expression of HACE1 in human tumor cells directly abrogates in vitro and in vivo tumor growth, whereas downregulation of HACE1 via siRNA allows non-tumorigenic human cells to form tumors in vivo. Mechanistically, the tumor-suppressor function of HACE1 is dependent on its E3 ligase activity and HACE1 controls adhesion-dependent growth and cell cycle progression during cell stress through degradation of cyclin D1. Thus, HACE1 is a candidate chromosome 6q21 tumor-suppressor gene involved in multiple cancers.


Nature | 2013

CLP1 links tRNA metabolism to progressive motor-neuron loss.

Toshikatsu Hanada; Stefan Weitzer; Barbara Mair; Christian Bernreuther; Brian J. Wainger; Justin K. Ichida; Reiko Hanada; Michael Orthofer; Shane J. Cronin; Vukoslav Komnenovic; Adi Minis; Fuminori Sato; Hiromitsu Mimata; Akihiko Yoshimura; Ido Tamir; Johannes Rainer; Reinhard Kofler; Avraham Yaron; Kevin Eggan; Clifford J. Woolf; Markus Glatzel; Ruth Herbst; Javier Martinez; Josef M. Penninger

CLP1 was the first mammalian RNA kinase to be identified. However, determining its in vivo function has been elusive. Here we generated kinase-dead Clp1 (Clp1K/K) mice that show a progressive loss of spinal motor neurons associated with axonal degeneration in the peripheral nerves and denervation of neuromuscular junctions, resulting in impaired motor function, muscle weakness, paralysis and fatal respiratory failure. Transgenic rescue experiments show that CLP1 functions in motor neurons. Mechanistically, loss of CLP1 activity results in accumulation of a novel set of small RNA fragments, derived from aberrant processing of tyrosine pre-transfer RNA. These tRNA fragments sensitize cells to oxidative-stress-induced p53 (also known as TRP53) activation and p53-dependent cell death. Genetic inactivation of p53 rescues Clp1K/K mice from the motor neuron loss, muscle denervation and respiratory failure. Our experiments uncover a mechanistic link between tRNA processing, formation of a new RNA species and progressive loss of lower motor neurons regulated by p53.


Neuron | 2015

Silencing Nociceptor Neurons Reduces Allergic Airway Inflammation

Sébastien Talbot; Raja-Elie E. Abdulnour; Patrick R. Burkett; Seungkyu Lee; Shane J. Cronin; Maud A. Pascal; Cédric J. Laedermann; Simmie L. Foster; Johnathan V. Tran; Nicole Y. Lai; Isaac M. Chiu; Nader Ghasemlou; Matthew DiBiase; David P. Roberson; Christian von Hehn; Busranour Agac; Oliver Haworth; Hiroyuki Seki; Josef M. Penninger; Vijay K. Kuchroo; Bruce P. Bean; Bruce D. Levy; Clifford J. Woolf

Lung nociceptors initiate cough and bronchoconstriction. To elucidate if these fibers also contribute to allergic airway inflammation, we stimulated lung nociceptors with capsaicin and observed increased neuropeptide release and immune cell infiltration. In contrast, ablating Nav1.8(+) sensory neurons or silencing them with QX-314, a charged sodium channel inhibitor that enters via large-pore ion channels to specifically block nociceptors, substantially reduced ovalbumin- or house-dust-mite-induced airway inflammation and bronchial hyperresponsiveness. We also discovered that IL-5, a cytokine produced by activated immune cells, acts directly on nociceptors to induce the release of vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP). VIP then stimulates CD4(+) and resident innate lymphoid type 2 cells, creating an inflammatory signaling loop that promotes allergic inflammation. Our results indicate that nociceptors amplify pathological adaptive immune responses and that silencing these neurons with QX-314 interrupts this neuro-immune interplay, revealing a potential new therapeutic strategy for asthma.


Immunological Reviews | 2007

From T-cell activation signals to signaling control of anti-cancer immunity

Shane J. Cronin; Josef M. Penninger

Summary: The activation of resting T cells is crucial to most immune processes. Recognition of foreign antigen by T‐cell receptors has to be correctly translated into signal transduction events necessary for the induction of an effective immune response. In this review, we discuss the essential signals, molecules, and processes necessary to achieve full T‐cell activation. In addition to describing these key biological events, we also discuss how T‐cell receptor signaling may be harnessed to yield new therapeutic targets for a next generation of anti‐cancer drugs.


Neuron | 2015

Reduction of Neuropathic and Inflammatory Pain through Inhibition of the Tetrahydrobiopterin Pathway.

Alban Latremoliere; Alexandra Latini; Nick Andrews; Shane J. Cronin; Masahide Fujita; Katarzyna Irena Gorska; Ruud Hovius; Carla Romero; Surawee Chuaiphichai; Michio W. Painter; Giulia Miracca; Olusegun Babaniyi; Aline Pertile Remor; Kelly Duong; Priscilla Riva; Lee B. Barrett; Nerea Ferreirós; Alasdair Naylor; Josef M. Penninger; Irmgard Tegeder; Jian Zhong; Julian Blagg; Keith M. Channon; Kai Johnsson; Michael Costigan; Clifford J. Woolf

Human genetic studies have revealed an association between GTP cyclohydrolase 1 polymorphisms, which decrease tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) levels, and reduced pain in patients. We now show that excessive BH4 is produced in mice by both axotomized sensory neurons and macrophages infiltrating damaged nerves and inflamed tissue. Constitutive BH4 overproduction in sensory neurons increases pain sensitivity, whereas blocking BH4 production only in these cells reduces nerve injury-induced hypersensitivity without affecting nociceptive pain. To minimize risk of side effects, we targeted sepiapterin reductase (SPR), whose blockade allows minimal BH4 production through the BH4 salvage pathways. Using a structure-based design, we developed a potent SPR inhibitor and show that it reduces pain hypersensitivity effectively with a concomitant decrease in BH4 levels in target tissues, acting both on sensory neurons and macrophages, with no development of tolerance or adverse effects. Finally, we demonstrate that sepiapterin accumulation is a sensitive biomarker for SPR inhibition in vivo.


Journal of Autoimmunity | 2011

Coronin 1A is an essential regulator of the TGFβ receptor/SMAD3 signaling pathway in Th17 CD4(+) T cells.

Sandra Kaminski; Natascha Hermann-Kleiter; Marlies Meisel; Nikolaus Thuille; Shane J. Cronin; Hiromitsu Hara; Friedrich Fresser; Josef M. Penninger; Gottfried Baier

Transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) plays a central role in maintaining immune homeostasis by regulating the initiation and termination of immune responses and thus preventing the development of autoimmune diseases. In this study, we describe an essential mechanism by which the actin regulatory protein Coronin 1A (Coro1A) ensures the proper response of Th17 CD4(+) T cells to TGFβ. Coro1A has been established as a key player in T cell survival, migration, activation, and Ca(2+) regulation in naive T cells. We show that mice lacking Coro1a developed less severe experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). Unexpectedly, upon the re-induction of EAE, Coro1a(-/-) mice exhibited enhanced EAE signs that correlated with increased numbers of IL-17 producing CD4(+) cells in the central nervous system (CNS) compared to wild-type mice. In vitro differentiated Coro1a(-/-) Th17 CD4(+) T cells consistently produced more IL-17 than wild-type cells and displayed a Th17/Th1-like phenotype in regard to the expression of the Th1 markers T-bet and IFNγ. Mechanistically, the Coro1a(-/-) Th17 cell phenotype correlated with a severe defect in TGFβR-mediated SMAD3 activation. Taken together, these data provide experimental evidence of a non-redundant role of Coro1A in the regulation of Th17 CD4(+) cell effector functions and, subsequently, in the development of autoimmunity.

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Josef M. Penninger

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Daniel Schramek

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Michael Orthofer

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Tamara Zoranovic

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Clifford J. Woolf

Boston Children's Hospital

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Belinda Angjeli

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Gottfried Baier

Innsbruck Medical University

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Iris Uribesalgo

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Maria Novatchkova

Research Institute of Molecular Pathology

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