
Professor Pete Cullen
B.Sc., Ph.D.(E.Anglia)
Current positions
Royal Society Noreen Murray Research Professor
School of Biochemistry
Contact
Press and media
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Research interests
The endosomal network comprises a series of interconnected membrane bound compartments that in regulating the sorting and signaling of proteinaceous cargoes including receptors, transporters and adhesion molecules, orchestrates and fine-tunes numerous cellular processes. A major challenge is to achieve a thorough molecular description of how this network operates, and in so doing, how defects contribute to the pathoetiology of human disease.
To date our understanding of endosomal sorting has been restricted by a tendency to focus on individual ‘model’ cargoes, and the ‘isolated’ characterization of protein complexes that define individual sorting events. To achieve a thorough understanding we must break new ground and take a global view of cargo proteins and an integrated approach to how the mechanistic complexities of multiple sorting complexes are orchestrated, not only in individual cultured cells but also within the in vivo context of tissues and physiological systems.
In the laboratory we seek to address these issues by combining new experimental protocols utilizing the power of quantitative proteomics to identify sorting complexes and achieve an unbiased global analysis of the cargoes that they sort. In combining these molecular approaches with in vivo studies in model organisms and collaborative genetic analysis of patient cohorts, our research aims to define the underlying defects in endosomal sorting and signaling that occur in human disease.
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
Defining the Commander endosomal cargo sorting pathway in health and disease
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of BiochemistryDates
01/04/2024 to 31/03/2029
Enhanced Research Expenses for Royal Society Research Professor
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of BiochemistryDates
01/04/2023 to 31/03/2026
Royal Society Research Professorships Additional 75K Research Expenses 2022
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of BiochemistryDates
01/02/2023 to 30/09/2023
Royal Society Noreen Murray Research Professorship Supplement
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of BiochemistryDates
01/01/2022 to 31/12/2023
Royal Society Noreen Murray Research Professorship Supplement
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of BiochemistryDates
01/01/2022 to 31/12/2023
Thesis supervisions
Dissecting the molecular and functional interactions of retromer
Supervisors
Molecular insights into the role of endosomal recycling in health and disease
Supervisors
The Lysosomal Targeting of AMPARs in Response to Amyloidopathy
Supervisors
Reciprocal Autophagy Control by the LIM Homeodomain Transcription Factors LMX1A and LMX1B Safeguards Human Midbrain Dopaminergic Neurons
Supervisors
Exploring the role of BCL-3 in colorectal cancer cell therapeutic resistance
Supervisors
Publications
Recent publications
19/08/2024CHC22 clathrin recruitment to the early secretory pathway requires two-site interaction with SNX5 and p115
EMBO Journal
Mechanism and regulation of cargo entry into the Commander endosomal recycling pathway
Nature Communications
Structural basis for coupling of the WASH subunit FAM21 with the endosomal SNX27-Retromer complex
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Retromer-dependent lysosomal stress in Parkinson's disease
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
CHC22 clathrin membrane recruitment uses SNX5 in bipartite interaction with secretory tether p115
CHC22 clathrin membrane recruitment uses SNX5 in bipartite interaction with secretory tether p115