Tony Tiganis

Tony Tiganis

Monash University

H-index: 53

Oceania-Australia

About Tony Tiganis

Tony Tiganis, With an exceptional h-index of 53 and a recent h-index of 37 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Monash University,

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Mitochondria-and NOX4-dependent antioxidant defense mitigates progression to nonalcoholic steatohepatitis in obesity

Correction to: Pancreatic T cell protein–tyrosine phosphatase deficiency affects beta cell function in mice

Hepatocyte-specific miR-33 deletion attenuates NAFLD-NASH-HCC progression

Methods of activating cytotoxic leukocytes using PTP1B and PTPN2 inhibitors

Stepwise progression of β-selection during T cell development involves histone deacetylation

MKP1 promotes nonalcoholic steatohepatitis by suppressing AMPK activity through LKB1 nuclear retention

A small molecule inhibitor of PTP1B and PTPN2 enhances T cell anti-tumor immunity

Structure guided studies of the interaction between PTP1B and JAK

Tony Tiganis Information

University

Monash University

Position

___

Citations(all)

11827

Citations(since 2020)

4248

Cited By

9220

hIndex(all)

53

hIndex(since 2020)

37

i10Index(all)

103

i10Index(since 2020)

86

Email

University Profile Page

Monash University

Top articles of Tony Tiganis

Mitochondria-and NOX4-dependent antioxidant defense mitigates progression to nonalcoholic steatohepatitis in obesity

Authors

Spencer Greatorex,Supreet Kaur,Chrysovalantou E Xirouchaki,Pei K Goh,Florian Wiede,Amanda J Genders,Melanie Tran,YaoYao Jia,Arthe Raajendiran,Wendy A Brown,Catriona A McLean,Junichi Sadoshima,Matthew J Watt,Tony Tiganis

Journal

The Journal of Clinical Investigation

Published Date

2024/2/1

Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is prevalent in the majority of individuals with obesity, but in a subset of these individuals, it progresses to nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (0NASH) and fibrosis. The mechanisms that prevent NASH and fibrosis in the majority of patients with NAFLD remain unclear. Here, we report that NAD(P)H oxidase 4 (NOX4) and nuclear factor erythroid 2–related factor 2 (NFE2L2) were elevated in hepatocytes early in disease progression to prevent NASH and fibrosis. Mitochondria-derived ROS activated NFE2L2 to induce the expression of NOX4, which in turn generated H2O2 to exacerbate the NFE2L2 antioxidant defense response. The deletion or inhibition of NOX4 in hepatocytes decreased ROS and attenuated antioxidant defense to promote mitochondrial oxidative stress, damage proteins and lipids, diminish insulin signaling, and promote cell death upon oxidant challenge …

Correction to: Pancreatic T cell protein–tyrosine phosphatase deficiency affects beta cell function in mice

Authors

Yannan Xi,Siming Liu,Ahmed Bettaieb,Kosuke Matsuo,Izumi Matsuo,Ellen Hosein,Samah Chahed,Florian Wiede,Sheng Zhang,Zhong-Yin Zhang,Rohit N Kulkarni,Tony Tiganis,Fawaz G Haj

Journal

Diabetologia

Published Date

2024/1

A splice in the blots shown in Fig 1a was not indicated when the article was published originally. Publication predated Diabetologia’s current policy that ‘Groupings and consolidation of data (eg removal of lanes from gels and blots) must be made apparent by the arrangement of figures (eg dividing lines) and should be explicitly indicated in the text of the figure legend’. The authors apologise for the failure to delineate this correctly but confirm that the splice does not affect the results or the conclusions of the paper. The original figure and figure legend have been updated.

Hepatocyte-specific miR-33 deletion attenuates NAFLD-NASH-HCC progression

Authors

Pablo Fernández-Tussy,Jonathan Sun,Magdalena P Cardelo,Nathan L Price,Leigh Goedeke,Chrysovalantou E Xirouchaki,Xiaoyong Yang,Oscar Pastor-Rojo,Anton M Bennett,Tony Tiganis,Yajaira Suárez,Carlos Fernández-Hernando

Journal

bioRxiv

Published Date

2023/1/20

The complexity of the multiple mechanisms underlying non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) progression remains a significant challenge for the development of effective therapeutics. miRNAs have shown great promise as regulators of biological processes and as therapeutic targets for complex diseases. Here, we study the role of hepatic miR-33, an important regulator of lipid metabolism, during the progression of NAFLD. We report that miR-33 is overexpressed in hepatocytes isolated from mice with NAFLD and demonstrate that its specific suppression in hepatocytes (miR-33 HKO) improves multiple aspects of the disease, including insulin resistance, steatosis, and inflammation and limits the progression to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), fibrosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Mechanistically, we find that hepatic miR-33 deficiency reduces lipid biosynthesis and promotes mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation to reduce lipid burden in hepatocytes. Additionally, miR-33 deficiency improves mitochondrial function, reducing oxidative stress. In miR-33 deficient hepatocytes, we found an increase in AMPKα activation, which regulates several pathways resulting in the attenuation of liver disease. The reduction in lipid accumulation and liver injury resulted in decreased transcriptional activity of the YAP/TAZ pathway, which may be involved in the reduced progression to HCC in the HKO livers. Together, these results suggest suppressing hepatic miR-33 may be an effective therapeutic approach at different stages of NAFLD/NASH/HCC disease progression.

Methods of activating cytotoxic leukocytes using PTP1B and PTPN2 inhibitors

Published Date

2023/11/9

The present invention generally relates to methods of activating cells via the inhibition of PTP1B and PTPN2 for use in therapy. For example, the invention relates to preparing cells ex vivo for use in immunotherapy, particularly cancer immunotherapy. More specifically, the invention relates to methods for the preparation of leukocytes, particularly T cells, exhibiting cytotoxic properties for use in adoptive cell transfer. The invention also relates to cells and compositions including them for cancer immunotherapy. The invention also relates to methods of immunotherapy, particularly cancer immunotherapy.

Stepwise progression of β-selection during T cell development involves histone deacetylation

Authors

Anchi S Chann,Mirren Charnley,Lucas M Newton,Andrea Newbold,Florian Wiede,Tony Tiganis,Patrick O Humbert,Ricky W Johnstone,Sarah M Russell

Journal

Life Science Alliance

Published Date

2023/1/1

During T cell development, the first step in creating a unique T cell receptor (TCR) is genetic recombination of the TCRβ chain. The quality of the new TCRβ is assessed at the β-selection checkpoint. Most cells fail this checkpoint and die, but the coordination of fate at the β-selection checkpoint is not yet understood. We shed new light on fate determination during β-selection using a selective inhibitor of histone deacetylase 6, ACY1215. ACY1215 disrupted the β-selection checkpoint. Characterising the basis for this disruption revealed a new, pivotal stage in β-selection, bookended by up-regulation of TCR co-receptors, CD28 and CD2, respectively. Within this “DN3bPre” stage, CD5 and Lef1 are up-regulated to reflect pre-TCR signalling, and their expression correlates with proliferation. These findings suggest a refined model of β-selection in which a coordinated increase in expression of pre-TCR, CD28, CD5 and …

MKP1 promotes nonalcoholic steatohepatitis by suppressing AMPK activity through LKB1 nuclear retention

Authors

Bin Qiu,Ahmed Lawan,Chrysovalantou E Xirouchaki,Jae-Sung Yi,Marie Robert,Lei Zhang,Wendy Brown,Carlos Fernández-Hernando,Xiaoyong Yang,Tony Tiganis,Anton M Bennett

Journal

Nature Communications

Published Date

2023/9/5

Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) is triggered by hepatocyte death through activation of caspase 6, as a result of decreased adenosine monophosphate (AMP)-activated protein kinase-alpha (AMPKα) activity. Increased hepatocellular death promotes inflammation which drives hepatic fibrosis. We show that the nuclear-localized mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) phosphatase-1 (MKP1) is upregulated in NASH patients and in NASH diet fed male mice. The focus of this work is to investigate whether and how MKP1 is involved in the development of NASH. Under NASH conditions increased oxidative stress, induces MKP1 expression leading to nuclear p38 MAPK dephosphorylation and decreases liver kinase B1 (LKB1) phosphorylation at a site required to promote LKB1 nuclear exit. Hepatic deletion of MKP1 in NASH diet fed male mice releases nuclear LKB1 into the cytoplasm to activate AMPKα and …

A small molecule inhibitor of PTP1B and PTPN2 enhances T cell anti-tumor immunity

Authors

Shuwei Liang,Eric Tran,Xin Du,Jiajun Dong,Harrison Sudholz,Hao Chen,Zihan Qu,Nicholas D Huntington,Jeffrey J Babon,Nadia J Kershaw,Zhong-Yin Zhang,Jonathan B Baell,Florian Wiede,Tony Tiganis

Journal

Nature Communications

Published Date

2023/7/27

The inhibition of protein tyrosine phosphatases 1B (PTP1B) and N2 (PTPN2) has emerged as an exciting approach for bolstering T cell anti-tumor immunity. ABBV-CLS-484 is a PTP1B/PTPN2 inhibitor in clinical trials for solid tumors. Here we have explored the therapeutic potential of a related small-molecule-inhibitor, Compound-182. We demonstrate that Compound-182 is a highly potent and selective active site competitive inhibitor of PTP1B and PTPN2 that enhances T cell recruitment and activation and represses the growth of tumors in mice, without promoting overt immune-related toxicities. The enhanced anti-tumor immunity in immunogenic tumors can be ascribed to the inhibition of PTP1B/PTPN2 in T cells, whereas in cold tumors, Compound-182 elicited direct effects on both tumor cells and T cells. Importantly, treatment with Compound-182 rendered otherwise resistant tumors sensitive to α-PD-1 therapy …

Structure guided studies of the interaction between PTP1B and JAK

Authors

Rhiannon Morris,Narelle Keating,Cyrus Tan,Hao Chen,Artem Laktyushin,Tamanna Saiyed,Nicholas PD Liau,Nicos A Nicola,Tony Tiganis,Nadia J Kershaw,Jeffrey J Babon

Journal

Communications Biology

Published Date

2023/6/14

Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase 1B (PTP1B) is the prototypical protein tyrosine phosphatase and plays an essential role in the regulation of several kinase-driven signalling pathways. PTP1B displays a preference for bisphosphorylated substrates. Here we identify PTP1B as an inhibitor of IL-6 and show that, in vitro, it can dephosphorylate all four members of the JAK family. In order to gain a detailed understanding of the molecular mechanism of JAK dephosphorylation, we undertook a structural and biochemical analysis of the dephosphorylation reaction. We identified a product-trapping PTP1B mutant that allowed visualisation of the tyrosine and phosphate products of the reaction and a substrate-trapping mutant with a vastly decreased off-rate compared to those previously described. The latter mutant was used to determine the structure of bisphosphorylated JAK peptides bound to the enzyme active site. These …

Small Molecule Degraders of Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase 1B and T‐Cell Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase for Cancer Immunotherapy

Authors

Jiajun Dong,Jinmin Miao,Yiming Miao,Zihan Qu,Sheng Zhang,Peipei Zhu,Florian Wiede,Brenson A Jassim,Yunpeng Bai,Quyen Nguyen,Jianping Lin,Lan Chen,Tony Tiganis,W Andy Tao,Zhong‐Yin Zhang

Journal

Angewandte Chemie International Edition

Published Date

2023/5/22

Protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B) and T‐cell protein tyrosine phosphatase (TC‐PTP) play non‐redundant negative regulatory roles in T‐cell activation, tumor antigen presentation, insulin and leptin signaling, and are potential targets for several therapeutic applications. Here, we report the development of a highly potent and selective small molecule degrader DU‐14 for both PTP1B and TC‐PTP. DU‐14 mediated PTP1B and TC‐PTP degradation requires both target protein(s) and VHL E3 ligase engagement and is also ubiquitination‐ and proteasome‐dependent. DU‐14 enhances IFN‐γ induced JAK1/2‐STAT1 pathway activation and promotes MHC‐I expression in tumor cells. DU‐14 also activates CD8+ T‐cells and augments STAT1 and STAT5 phosphorylation. Importantly, DU‐14 induces PTP1B and TC‐PTP degradation in vivo and suppresses MC38 syngeneic tumor growth. The results indicate that …

Targeting protein tyrosine phosphatase 22 does not enhance the efficacy of chimeric antigen receptor T cells in solid tumors

Authors

Xin Du,Phillip K Darcy,Florian Wiede,Tony Tiganis

Journal

Molecular and Cellular Biology

Published Date

2022/3/1

Adoptive cell therapy with chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells has revolutionized the treatment of certain B cell malignancies but has been in ineffective against solid tumors. Recent studies have highlighted the potential of targeting negative regulators of T cell signaling to enhance the efficacy and extend the utility of CAR T cells to solid tumors. Autoimmunity-linked protein tyrosine phosphatase N22 (PTPN22) has been proposed as a target for cancer immunotherapy. Here, we have used CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing to generate PTPN22-deficient (Ptpn22 Δ/Δ) mice (C57BL/6) and assessed the impact of PTPN22 deficiency on the cytotoxicity and efficacy of CAR T cells in vitro and in vivo. As reported previously, PTPN22 deficiency was accompanied by the promotion of effector T cell responses ex vivo and the repression of syngeneic tumor growth in vivo. However, PTPN22 deficiency did not enhance the …

PTP1B is an intracellular checkpoint that limits T-cell and CAR T-cell antitumor immunity

Authors

Florian Wiede,Kun-Hui Lu,Xin Du,Mara N Zeissig,Rachel Xu,Pei Kee Goh,Chrysovalantou E Xirouchaki,Samuel J Hogarth,Spencer Greatorex,Kevin Sek,Roger J Daly,Paul A Beavis,Phillip K Darcy,Nicholas K Tonks,Tony Tiganis

Journal

Cancer Discovery

Published Date

2022/3/1

Immunotherapies aimed at alleviating the inhibitory constraints on T cells have revolutionized cancer management. To date, these have focused on the blockade of cell-surface checkpoints such as PD-1. Herein we identify protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B) as an intracellular checkpoint that is upregulated in T cells in tumors. We show that increased PTP1B limits T-cell expansion and cytotoxicity to contribute to tumor growth. T cell–specific PTP1B deletion increased STAT5 signaling, and this enhanced the antigen-induced expansion and cytotoxicity of CD8+ T cells to suppress tumor growth. The pharmacologic inhibition of PTP1B recapitulated the T cell–mediated repression of tumor growth and enhanced the response to PD-1 blockade. Furthermore, the deletion or inhibition of PTP1B enhanced the efficacy of adoptively transferred chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells against solid …

PTPN2 elicits cell autonomous and non–cell autonomous effects on antitumor immunity in triple-negative breast cancer

Authors

Pei Kee Goh,Florian Wiede,Mara N Zeissig,Kara L Britt,Shuwei Liang,Tim Molloy,Nathan Goode,Rachel Xu,Sherene Loi,Mathias Muller,Patrick O Humbert,Catriona McLean,Tony Tiganis

Journal

Science advances

Published Date

2022/2/23

The tumor-suppressor PTPN2 is diminished in a subset of triple-negative breast cancers (TNBCs). Paradoxically, PTPN2-deficiency in tumors or T cells in mice can facilitate T cell recruitment and/or activation to promote antitumor immunity. Here, we explored the therapeutic potential of targeting PTPN2 in tumor cells and T cells. PTPN2-deficiency in TNBC associated with T cell infiltrates and PD-L1 expression, whereas low PTPN2 associated with improved survival. PTPN2 deletion in murine mammary epithelial cells TNBC models, did not promote tumorigenicity but increased STAT-1–dependent T cell recruitment and PD-L1 expression to repress tumor growth and enhance the efficacy of anti-PD-1. Furthermore, the combined deletion of PTPN2 in tumors and T cells facilitated T cell recruitment and activation and further repressed tumor growth or ablated tumors already predominated by exhausted T cells. Thus …

Erratum: Elevated Hypothalamic TCPTP in Obesity Contributes to Cellular Leptin Resistance (Elevated Hypothalamic TCPTP in Obesity Contributes to Cellular Leptin Resistance …

Authors

Kim Loh,Atsushi Fukushima,Xinmei Zhang,Sandra Galic,Dana Briggs,Pablo J Enriori,Stephanie Simonds,Florian Wiede,Alexander Reichenbach,Christine Hauser,Natalie A Sims,Kendra K Bence,Sheng Zhang,Zhong Yin Zhang,Barbara B Kahn,Benjamin G Neel,Zane B Andrews,Michael A Cowley,Tony Tiganis

Journal

Cell Metabolism

Published Date

2022/11/1

(Cell Metabolism 14, 684–699; November 2, 2011) We regret to inform that a mistake was made when preparing Figure 4A. In the figure, the actin blot corresponding to the p-STAT3/STAT3/TCPTP blots was inadvertently flipped and mistakenly used as a tubulin blot for p-JAK2. The tubulin blot should be as shown in the corrected figure. The authors apologize for this error and state that this does not change the scientific conclusion of the article in any way.[Formula

Abstract PR04: CRISPR-mediated PTPN2 deletion in car T cells enhances anti-tumor efficacy

Authors

Xin Du,Florian Wiede,Phillip K Darcy,Tony Tiganis

Journal

Cancer Immunology Research

Published Date

2022/1/1

Chimeric Antigen Receptor T cell (CAR T) immunotherapy has been remarkably successful in the treatment of B-Cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (B-ALL). However, beyond hematological malignancies, CAR T cells have been ineffective in treating solid tumors. Novel approaches for enhancing the ability of CAR T cells to combat solid tumors are urgently required. Protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) are enzymes that regulate a wide range of physiological processes including metabolism, cellular growth, proliferation and differentiation by controlling tyrosine phosphorylation-dependent signaling. PTPs are key regulators of T cell signaling and contribute to the maintenance of immune tolerance. Studies from our group have shown that PTPN2 plays pivotal role in negatively regulating T cell receptor (TCR) signaling by dephosphorylating and inactivating the Src family protein tyrosine kinase LCK (Wiede, Shields …

Methods and compositions for the treatment of obesity

Published Date

2012/11/8

(57) ABSTRACT A process of enhancing insulin excretion in a subject includes administering to the Subject a polyphenol active ingredient. The polyphenol active ingredient is a purified cyanidin-3-glycoside alone or purified cyanidin alone. The pharmaceu tically acceptable carrier is administered with the polyphenol active ingredient.

Adaptive translational reprogramming of metabolism limits the response to targeted therapy in BRAFV600 melanoma

Authors

Lorey K Smith,Tiffany Parmenter,Margarete Kleinschmidt,Eric P Kusnadi,Jian Kang,Claire A Martin,Peter Lau,Riyaben Patel,Julie Lorent,David Papadopoli,Anna Trigos,Teresa Ward,Aparna D Rao,Emily J Lelliott,Karen E Sheppard,David Goode,Rodney J Hicks,Tony Tiganis,Kaylene J Simpson,Ola Larsson,Benjamin Blythe,Carleen Cullinane,Vihandha O Wickramasinghe,Richard B Pearson,Grant A McArthur

Journal

Nature communications

Published Date

2022/3/1

Despite the success of therapies targeting oncogenes in cancer, clinical outcomes are limited by residual disease that ultimately results in relapse. This residual disease is often characterized by non-genetic adaptive resistance, that in melanoma is characterised by altered metabolism. Here, we examine how targeted therapy reprograms metabolism in BRAF-mutant melanoma cells using a genome-wide RNA interference (RNAi) screen and global gene expression profiling. Using this systematic approach we demonstrate post-transcriptional regulation of metabolism following BRAF inhibition, involving selective mRNA transport and translation. As proof of concept we demonstrate the RNA processing kinase U2AF homology motif kinase 1 (UHMK1) associates with mRNAs encoding metabolism proteins and selectively controls their transport and translation during adaptation to BRAF-targeted therapy. UHMK1 …

PTP61F mediates cell competition and mitigates tumorigenesis

Authors

John E La Marca,Lee F Willoughby,Kirsten Allan,Marta Portela,Pei Kee Goh,Tony Tiganis,Helena E Richardson

Journal

International Journal of Molecular Sciences

Published Date

2021/1

Tissue homeostasis via the elimination of aberrant cells is fundamental for organism survival. Cell competition is a key homeostatic mechanism, contributing to the recognition and elimination of aberrant cells, preventing their malignant progression and the development of tumors. Here, using Drosophila as a model organism, we have defined a role for protein tyrosine phosphatase 61F (PTP61F) (orthologue of mammalian PTP1B and TCPTP) in the initiation and progression of epithelial cancers. We demonstrate that a Ptp61F null mutation confers cells with a competitive advantage relative to neighbouring wild-type cells, while elevating PTP61F levels has the opposite effect. Furthermore, we show that knockdown of Ptp61F affects the survival of clones with impaired cell polarity, and that this occurs through regulation of the JAK–STAT signalling pathway. Importantly, PTP61F plays a robust non-cell-autonomous role in influencing the elimination of adjacent polarity-impaired mutant cells. Moreover, in a neoplastic RAS-driven polarity-impaired tumor model, we show that PTP61F levels determine the aggressiveness of tumors, with Ptp61F knockdown or overexpression, respectively, increasing or reducing tumor size. These effects correlate with the regulation of the RAS–MAPK and JAK–STAT signalling by PTP61F. Thus, PTP61F acts as a tumor suppressor that can function in an autonomous and non-cell-autonomous manner to ensure cellular fitness and attenuate tumorigenesis.

Methods of activating cells via ptp 1b inhibition

Published Date

2021/7/8

The present invention generally relates to methods of activating cells for use in therapy. For example, the invention relates to preparing cells ex vivo for use in immunotherapy, particularly cancer immunotherapy. More specifically, the invention relates to methods for the preparation of leukocytes, particularly T cells through PTP1B inhibition, exhibiting cytotoxic properties for use in adoptive cell transfer. The invention also relates to cells and compositions including them for cancer immunotherapy. The invention also relates to methods of immunotherapy, particularly cancer immunotherapy.

Ptpn2 and KLRG1 regulate the generation and function of tissue-resident memory CD8+ T cells in skin

Authors

Katharina Hochheiser,Florian Wiede,Teagan Wagner,David Freestone,Matthias H Enders,Moshe Olshansky,Brendan Russ,Simone Nüssing,Emma Bawden,Asolina Braun,Annabell Bachem,Elise Gressier,Robyn McConville,Simone L Park,Claerwen M Jones,Gayle M Davey,David E Gyorki,David Tscharke,Ian A Parish,Stephen Turner,Marco J Herold,Tony Tiganis,Sammy Bedoui,Thomas Gebhardt

Journal

Journal of Experimental Medicine

Published Date

2021/4/29

Tissue-resident memory T cells (TRM cells) are key elements of tissue immunity. Here, we investigated the role of the regulator of T cell receptor and cytokine signaling, Ptpn2, in the formation and function of TRM cells in skin. Ptpn2-deficient CD8+ T cells displayed a marked defect in generating CD69+ CD103+ TRM cells in response to herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) skin infection. This was accompanied by a reduction in the proportion of KLRG1− memory precursor cells and a transcriptional bias toward terminal differentiation. Of note, forced expression of KLRG1 was sufficient to impede TRM cell formation. Normalizing memory precursor frequencies by transferring equal numbers of KLRG1− cells restored TRM generation, demonstrating that Ptpn2 impacted skin seeding with precursors rather than downstream TRM cell differentiation. Importantly, Ptpn2-deficient TRM cells augmented skin autoimmunity but …

Insulin signaling in AgRP neurons regulates meal size to limit glucose excursions and insulin resistance

Authors

Garron T Dodd,Seung Jae Kim,Mathieu Méquinion,Chrysovalantou E Xirouchaki,Jens C Brüning,Zane B Andrews,Tony Tiganis

Journal

Science Advances

Published Date

2021/2/26

The importance of hypothalamic insulin signaling on feeding and glucose metabolism remains unclear. We report that insulin acts on AgRP neurons to acutely decrease meal size and thereby limit postprandial glucose and insulin excursions. The promotion of insulin signaling in AgRP neurons decreased meal size without altering total caloric intake, whereas the genetic ablation of the insulin receptor had the opposite effect. The promotion of insulin signaling also decreased the intake of sucrose-sweetened water or high-fat food over standard chow, without influencing food-seeking and hedonic behaviors. The ability of heightened insulin signaling to override the hedonistic consumption of highly palatable high-fat food attenuated the development of systemic insulin resistance, without affecting body weight. Our findings define an unprecedented mechanism by which insulin acutely influences glucose metabolism …

See List of Professors in Tony Tiganis University(Monash University)

Tony Tiganis FAQs

What is Tony Tiganis's h-index at Monash University?

The h-index of Tony Tiganis has been 37 since 2020 and 53 in total.

What are Tony Tiganis's top articles?

The articles with the titles of

Mitochondria-and NOX4-dependent antioxidant defense mitigates progression to nonalcoholic steatohepatitis in obesity

Correction to: Pancreatic T cell protein–tyrosine phosphatase deficiency affects beta cell function in mice

Hepatocyte-specific miR-33 deletion attenuates NAFLD-NASH-HCC progression

Methods of activating cytotoxic leukocytes using PTP1B and PTPN2 inhibitors

Stepwise progression of β-selection during T cell development involves histone deacetylation

MKP1 promotes nonalcoholic steatohepatitis by suppressing AMPK activity through LKB1 nuclear retention

A small molecule inhibitor of PTP1B and PTPN2 enhances T cell anti-tumor immunity

Structure guided studies of the interaction between PTP1B and JAK

...

are the top articles of Tony Tiganis at Monash University.

What is Tony Tiganis's total number of citations?

Tony Tiganis has 11,827 citations in total.

    academic-engine

    Useful Links