Mitchell Kronenberg
La Jolla Institute for Immunology, USA, United States
- This delegate is presenting an abstract at this event.

Mitchell Kronenberg received a Ph.D. from the California Institute of Technology, and after a postdoctoral fellowship there, he was on the faculty of the UCLA School of Medicine. He joined the La Jolla Institute for Immunology in 1997 and served as President (2003-2021), and now as Chief Scientific Officer. The Kronenberg laboratory investigates the development and function of iNKT cells and, more recently, MAIT cells. The lab analyzes the response of these innate-like T cells to acute infections. The lab also investigates aspects of mucosal immunity, especially the function of HVEM and other TNF family receptors in regulating immunity.
Presentations this author is a contributor to:
Immune evasion mechanism of Streptococcus pneumoniae - gain fat to lose sugar (#28)
8:20 AM
Nadine Hartmann
Session 4: Antigen presentation and APC interactions
Riboflavin metabolism variation among clinical isolates of Streptococcus pneumoniae results in differential activation of MAIT cells (#24)
8:10 PM
Melanie Harriff
Session 3: Anti-microbial defense
Transcriptional profiling of peripheral invariant NKT subsets (#163)
1:15 PM
Isaac Engel
Poster Session 1 - Odd Numbers + Rapid Fire 1 Posters
NKT cell subsets involved in host defense from pulmonary Streptococcus pneumoniae infection (#23)
7:50 PM
Catherine M Crosby
Session 3: Anti-microbial defense
Assessment of global chromatin accessibility in peripheral iNKT cell subsets (#158)
5:30 PM
Mallory L Paynich
Poster Session 2 - Even Numbers + Rapid Fire 2 Posters
A whole genome mouse siRNA screen to identify novel genes involved in lipid antigen presentation (#113)
1:15 PM
Shilpi Chandra
Poster Session 1 - Odd Numbers + Rapid Fire 1 Posters
Possible protective roles of MAIT cells and environmental iNKT cell antigens in asthma in inner-city children. (#73)
9:30 AM
Gerhard Wingender
Session 11: Environmental antigens and Microbiota