Crotty Lab

Shane Crotty, Ph.D.

Professor & Chief Scientific Officer

Infectious diseases kill more people worldwide than any other single cause. That’s one of the main reasons I focus on vaccines. They really have the potential for improving lives and saving lives.

Overview

Shane Crotty, Ph.D., and his team study immunity against infectious diseases. They investigate how the immune system remembers infections and vaccines. By remembering infections and vaccines, the body is protected from becoming infected in the future. Vaccines are one of the most cost-effective medical treatments in modern civilization and are responsible for saving millions of lives. Yet, good vaccines are very difficult to design, and very few new vaccines have been made in the past 10 years. A better understanding of immune memory will facilitate the ability to make new vaccines. Dr. Tony Fauci, NIH, referred to some of the Crotty lab work as “exceedingly important to the field of immunogen design.”

COVID-19 Immunology

Credit: Cell, May 2020

Dr. Crotty is a member of the LJI Coronavirus Task Force. The Crotty Lab, in close collaboration with the lab of LJI Professor Alessandro Sette, Dr.Biol.Sci., was the first to publish a detailed analysis of the immune system’s response to SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19 (Cell, May 2020). The made a number of important findings. Most importantly, it showed that the immune system activates all three major branches of “adaptive immunity” (which learns to recognize specific viruses) to try to fight the virus: CD4 “helper” T cells , CD8 “killer” T cells, and antibodies. The LJI team found good immune responses to multiple different parts of SARS-CoV-2 (imagine the virus is made out of legos, and the immune system can recognize different individual legos), including the Spike protein, which is the main target of almost all COVID-19 vaccine efforts. This research helped dispel fears that the virus would elude efforts to create an effective vaccine. This scientific study had served as an important benchmark of immune responses for clinical studies and COVID-19 vaccine studies around the world, as evidenced by how extensively the study is being quoted (cited) in the scientific literature. It has also become the #1 most public attention getting Cell paper ever, according to Almetric.

Drs. Crotty and Sette also found that crossreactive immune memory appeared to exist in ~50% of unexposed, healthy people (Cell, May 2020). They inferred this might be due to previous infections with common cold coronaviruses. The LJI team went on to show that crossreactive memory T cells that recognize common cold coronaviruses also recognize matching sites on SARS-CoV-2 (Science, August 2020). The research may explain why some people have milder COVID-19 cases than others—though Crotty and Sette emphasize that this is speculation and much more data is needed (Nature Reviews Immunology, July 2020). Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, has shared this research with Congress, describing the study as “work we really need to pursue. We’re just at the cusp of really understanding the importance of this type of response in COVID.”

The Crotty Lab’s COVID-19 research has informed vaccine efforts worldwide. As highlighted by Voice of America, this work builds on what scientists have learned about past vaccines and the experimental approaches that may bring a COVID-19 vaccine to patients quickly. As Dr. Crotty has said, “I think there is good reason for optimism, but it’s not like in the movies. It takes a lot of people and a lot of time and effort to puzzle it out.”

Cells important for vaccines
Most vaccines work because they generate antibodies. Dr. Crotty made a seminal finding in how this process occurs (Science 2009). Dr. Crotty said it has been well established that antibody production is a multi-step process that involves interactions between several cellular players, key among them CD4 “helper” T cells, which are disease-fighting white blood cells that tell other cells to produce antibodies in response to infections. “There were different flavors of these helper T cells and, for many years, the wrong cell type was identified.” Dr. Crotty’s team showed that a new type of helper cell, “Tfh,” are required for antibody responses. His lab team set out to understand the inner workings of these critical cells in protective immune responses. “We discovered that the BCL6 gene was an on and off switch—a master regulator—in this process. In a series of experiments, we showed that if you turn on this gene, you get more helper cells, the Tfh type, and it is those cells that are telling the B cells to produce antibodies,” he said. The laboratory is now internationally recognized as the leader in Tfh cell biology, having elucidated critical aspects of Tfh cellular and molecular biology, which have been found to be not only important for vaccine biology but also in allergies, autoimmune diseases, and cancers.

New vaccine strategies
Dr. Crotty has a major focus studying human immune responses to vaccines. His lab is hard at work on candidate HIV vaccines with the CHAVID consortium. His lab is also hard at work on vaccine strategies for influenza, strep throat, and COVID-19. The Crotty lab studies new vaccine ideas and strategies that may be applicable to many diseases, based on a fundamental understanding of the underlying immune responses, and how the cells of the immune system interact. Last year the Crotty lab published that a simple slow delivery immunization strategy greatly improves the quality of vaccine responses (Cell 2019). The new strategy hinges on immune cell teamwork. Lead author Kimberly Cirelli, Ph.D., said, “It’s like physical training—you start off weak and then keep going back to the gym to get stronger. The germinal center is the gym and the B cells have to repeatedly go back to undergo rounds of selection to get better binding.” In 2020 the Crotty lab collaborated with Darrell Irvine’s lab at MIT to demonstrate a novel vaccine strategy (Nature Medicine 2020), with the labs hard at work on more new vaccine approaches.

Other background
Dr. Crotty regularly does media outreach on vaccines and immunity to infectious diseases. Dr. Crotty is also the author of Ahead of the Curve, a biography of Nobel laureate scientist David Baltimore, published in 2001, and reviewed in The Wall Street Journal and other publications. He earned his B.S. in Biology and Writing from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 1996, and his Ph.D. in Molecular Biology/Virology from the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) in 2001.

VOA-TEK: COVID-19 Research

Starting at 19:44, take a look back at how the Crotty Lab applied their research to support SARS-CoV2 vaccine development in the early days of the pandemic.

Featured Publications

Grifoni, A., Weiskopf, D., Ramirez, S.I., Mateus, J., Dan, J.M., Moderbacher, C.R., Rawlings, S.A., Sutherland, A., Premkumar, L., Jadi, R.S., Marrama, D., de Silva, A.M., Frazier, A., Carlin, A., Greenbaum, J.A., Peters, B., Krammer, F., Smith, D.M., Crotty, S., Sette, A.,
Rydyznski Moderbacher C, Ramirez SI, Dan JM, Grifoni A, Hastie KM, Weiskopf D, Belanger S, Abbott RK, Kim C, Choi J, Kato Y, Crotty EG, Kim C, Rawlings SA, Mateus J, Tse LPV, Frazier A, Baric R, Peters B, Greenbaum J, Ollmann Saphire E, Smith DM, Sette A, Crotty S
Dan JM, Mateus J, Kato Y, Hastie KM, Yu ED, Faliti CE, Grifoni A, Ramirez SI, Haupt S, Frazier A, Nakao C, Rayaprolu V, Rawlings SA, Peters B, Krammer F, Simon V, Saphire EO, Smith DM, Weiskopf D, Sette A, Crotty S.
Mateus J, Dan JM, Zhang Z, Rydyznski Moderbacher C, Lammers M, Goodwin B, Sette A, Crotty S, Weiskopf D.

Lab Members

Tasha Altheide, Ph.D.

Research Tech III
Crotty looks at camera and smiles. He is wearing a blue button-down

Shane Crotty, Ph.D.

Professor & Chief Scientific Officer

Jennifer Dan

Clinical Associate

Kristina Edwards, Ph.D.

Postdoctoral Fellow

Osirus Eisenman

Research Tech I
Photo portrait of Farhoud Faraji

Farhoud Faraji, Ph.D.

Resident Surgeon and Physician Postdoctoral Fellow

Brian Freeman

UCSD Graduate Student

Pablo Lucas Ezequiel Garin Ortega, Masters

Research Tech II

Sonya Haupt, Masters

UCSD Graduate Student

Natalie Hern

Research Tech I

Leonard Hills, M.D.

Postdoctoral Fellow

Christina Kim

Executive Project Manager

Da Sol Kuen, Ph.D.

Postdoctoral Fellow

Paul Gabriel Lopez

Research Tech III

Patrick Madden, Ph.D.

Postdoctoral Fellow

Ester Marina Zarate, Ph.D.

Postdoctoral Fellow

Carolyn Moderbacher

Instructor

Amber Myers, Masters

Research Tech III

Ivy Phung

Postdoctoral Fellow

Parham Ramezani Rad, Ph.D.

Instructor

Sydney Ramirez, M.D.

Instructor

Monica Rodriguez Farias, Masters

Research Tech III

Angel Sarabia

Research Tech I

Martin Schuetz, Ph.D.

Postdoctoral Fellow

Monolina Shil

Research Tech I/Flow Specialist I

Hannah Stacey, Ph.D.

Postdoctoral Fellow

Henry Sutton, Ph.D.

Instructor

Corina Vester, Masters

Graduate Student

Research Projects

A video lecture on Tfh cell biology can be seen here. Germinal centers are the critical sites for the development of long term humoral immunity in the form of antigen-specific

Broadly neutralizing antibodies have been discovered in ~5% of HIV+ individuals. Some of those antibodies (HIV bnAbs) are capable of neutralizing over 70% of all known HIV isolates. Finally, providing

From the Lab

Professors Shane Crotty, Ph.D., and Alessandro Sette, Dr. Biol.Sci., of La Jolla Institute for Immunology have been named as AAAS Fellows
LJI and Scripps Research scientists tackle the problem of antigen valency
With the global supply of Covid-19 vaccine still woefully inadequate, vaccine makers are scouring the pharmaceutical landscape for partners to ramp up manufacturing
The decline seen in some studies is normal, experts say. But scientists must wait to see whether infection confers long-term protection
Immunity to the novel coronavirus may last eight months or longer, according to a new study authored by respected scientists at leading labs, which found that individuals who recovered from the coronavirus developed “robust” levels of B cells and T cells (necessary for fighting off the virus) and “these cells may persist in the body for a very, very long time.”
A new study shows immune cells primed to fight the coronavirus should persist for a long time after someone is vaccinated or recovers from infection.
New LJI study shows how the fully vaccinated respond to a range of SARS-CoV-2 variants
We’re now more than seven months into the coronavirus pandemic that has upended the lives of most of Earth’s inhabitants.
The award is given annually to a former Cancer Research Institute postdoctoral fellow in recognition of outstanding success in academia or industry for research that has had a major impact in the field of immunology.
International collaboration provides important piece of COVID-19 puzzle
Researchers caution: It is too soon to say whether pre-existing immune cell memory affects COVID-19 clinical outcomes
Study finds robust antiviral T cell response in humans with COVID-19 and detects substantial crossreactivity in unexposed individuals; in a piece of good news provides a benchmark for testing of vaccine candidates.
New research suggests that some of us may be partially protected due to past encounters with common cold coronaviruses
A new approach that targets young immune cells may also work for creating vaccines against the flu, dengue, malaria and hepatitis C
LA JOLLA, CA—New research from scientists at La Jolla Institute for Immunology (LJI) suggests people who received COVID-19 vaccines and then experienced “breakthrough” infections are especially well armed against future SARS-CoV-2 infections.
Blood samples from recovered patients suggest a powerful, long-lasting immune response, researchers reported.
Which is too bad because we really need to understand how the immune system reacts to the coronavirus.
The rapid rise in different parts of the world of deadly, more infectious coronavirus variants that share new mutations is leading scientists to ask a critical question
Throughout the pandemic, scientists in San Diego have made big contributions
LJI Professors Shane Crotty, Ph.D., Bjoern Peters, Ph.D., and Alessandro Sette, Dr. Biol. Sci., were named “Highly Cited Researchers” this week by Clarivate.
LJI Professor Shane Crotty, PhD, has been appointed Chief Scientific Officer of La Jolla Institute for Immunology (LJI)
LJI scientists pioneer new method for measuring immune memory and SARS-CoV-2 responses in the upper airway
The new study shows how a protein works as a “master regulator” in the immune system
New investigation reveals the strength of T cell, B cell, and antibody responses over time
A record number of LJI researchers have been named to the 2022 list, including two early career scientists
Even elderly survivors show a strong, persistent immune memory
Immune system memory stays strong 6+ months post-vaccination, similar to responses in recovered COVID-19 patients
LJI scientists find that slowly releasing an HIV vaccine could prompt the body to make more powerful antibodies against the virus
Most vaccines include particles called adjuvants. But not all adjuvants are created equal.
Why declining antibodies don't spell disaster for long-lasting immunity
Crotty has advanced vaccine research and tested new strategies for stopping HIV, COVID-19
Optimism for Nasal Vaccines for Covid and Other Respiratory Pathogens
The international recognition reflects how LJI research is valued by scientific peers
Finding may help explain why people 65 and above face a higher risk of falling critically ill with COVID-19
A year of scientific uncertainty is over. Two vaccines look like they will work, and more should follow.
Once immunity is widespread in adults, the virus rampaging across the world will come to resemble the common cold, scientists predict.
LJI scientists test new vaccine strategy to help the body target HIV
Coronavirus: The Evidence
LJI scientists share high-resolution view of the lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) glycoprotein together with a neutralizing antibody
A combination of genetic and immunological factors makes some children susceptible to the bacteria that cause strep throat

Awards & Honors

2005-2009 Pew Scholar in the Biomedical Sciences
2012 American Association of Immunologists (AAI) BD Biosciences Investigator Award for outstanding, early-career research contributions to the field of Immunology
2018 UCSF Immunology Postdoctoral Fellows invited speaker.
2018 Stanford University Immunology Graduate Students invited speaker.
2018 University of Chicago Committee on Immunology (COI) Graduate Student body invited speaker.
2019 Best of Immunity 2018 (Abbott et al. Immunity 2018)
2019 Cancer Research Institute’s (CRI) Fredrick W. Alt Award for New Discoveries in Immunology
2019 Elected Fellow. American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).
2020 Altmetric. #1 public attention ranked paper ever in Cell. Grifoni et al., 2020
2020 Altmetric. #1 public attention ranked paper ever in Nature Reviews Immunology. Sette and Crotty 2020
2020 Nature Top 10 COVID papers of 2020. Dan et al. COVID-19 immune memory.
2021 NIH MERIT Award
2022 Elected Fellow. American Academy of Microbiology
2023 American Association of Immunologists (AAI) Herzenberg Award. For outstanding career contributions to B cell biology.
2016-2023 Highly Cited Researcher, 8 years running. Thompson Reuters ISI, Web of Science / Clarivate.

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