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Meet Shannon Reilly

Elisabeth Adkins Marnik
May 12, 2025

Shannon Reilly had an ambitious goal — curing AIDS. As a teenager, she thought it would be as simple as changing a component in the blood. She quickly learned that it was not that simple, but this early curiosity helped propel her into a career in science.

“My number one objective has always been to have a positive impact on the world,” Reilly said. “That goal, combined with a deep curiosity about the biological basis of life, naturally led me toward basic science research with translational potential.

Shannon Reilly
Shannon Reilly

Reilly’s first research experience at Mount Holyoke College sparked a passion for research, which grew after she transferred to UMass Amherst. There, she became interested in linking bench research with public health. This led her to pursue a Ph.D. at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, where she combined wet lab training with courses in epidemiology, biostatistics and nutrition. 

“This interdisciplinary training environment allowed me to bridge basic mechanistic research with clinical and population-level perspectives,” Reilly said. “Since metabolic diseases are so complex, the school of public health gave me broader perspectives than traditional research programs. I gained valuable insights into the complexity of the diseases I was studying.”

Following her graduate work, Reilly completed a postdoctoral fellowship in the lab of . is now an assistant professor of metabolic health and medicine at Weill Cornell Medical School, where she studies adipocytes, or fat cells.

The human body contains two types of adipocytes — white and brown. Brown adipocytes help maintain the bodily energy balance by producing heat, a process known as thermogenesis that occurs by uncoupling the electron transport chain from adenosine triphosphate production. This helps burn a large amount of stored fat for heat production. Conversely, white adipocytes had been thought to primarily store energy rather than participate in this overall energy balance through uncoupling. However, Reilly’s research has helped show that white adipocytes do participate in this process. Reilly’s work is focused on studying these adipocytes to better understand how the body decides between storing fat, or lipogenesis, and breaking it down, or lipolysis.

“In obesity, it’s not the adipocytes themselves that are harmful, but rather the overburdening of these cells that leads to dysfunction and contributes to disease,” Reilly said. “Unfortunately, societal narratives have framed obesity as a result of laziness or lack of discipline. In reality, obesity is a complex disease, not a personal failing, and people living with obesity deserve the same respect and compassion as anyone else.”

Reilly’s future directions will explore the downstream signaling involved in the balance between energy storage versus consumption. Her work could reveal novel insights into energy expenditure and adipocyte metabolism, which could lead to better strategies to prevent and treat metabolic diseases like obesity and cachexia.

“Given the sheer volume of white adipose tissue (in obese individuals), even modest increases in their energy expenditure could offer transformative potential for obesity treatment.” Reilly said.

Reilly also uses her experience in obesity and lipid metabolism in her role as a junior associate editor for the Journal of Lipid Research

The American Society of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology initiated the junior associate editor program in 2019 to help train the next generation of journal leaders and help reveal the behind-the-scenes of the peer-review process. Reilly said the program has helped her better understand publishing and peer review.

“It’s interesting to be on the editor side at the same time that I'm responding to my own reviews,” she shared.  “You think you understand what it's like on the other side (of a manuscript submission). Then you do it, and think, ‘OK, this is different (than what I thought). No one is trying to be mean.’  People are stressed; they might not understand something. Being on (the reviewer) side has shifted my perspective in important ways.”

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Elisabeth Adkins Marnik

Elisabeth Adkins Marnik is the Director of Science Education & Outreach at the MDI Biological Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Maine, where she is spearheading the development of new programming. This work is driven by her passion for making science accessible to students and the public. She is an ASBMB Today volunteer contributor as well as the Chief Scientific Officer of Those Nerdy Girls. Follow her on Instagram .
 

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