UTHSCT scientist awarded $1.2 million for study - KYTX CBS 19 Tyler Longview News Weather Sports

Scientist awarded $1.2 million to study inflammation's role in infection

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Courtesy of UTHSCT

TYLER (KYTX) - A scientist at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Tyler has been awarded a $1.2 million federal grant to investigate ways to control the inflammation involved in a life-threatening illness called septic shock.

Jian Fu, Ph.D., a UTHSCT assistant professor of biochemistry, will use the five-year grant from the National Institutes of Health to investigate the role of an enzyme called Sirt1 in the inflammation process associated with septic shock. Sirt1 and other enzymes regulate the rate of chemical reactions inside a cell.

Dr. Fu thinks that understanding the role Sirt1 plays in inflammation caused by septic shock could lead to better ways to prevent this devastating disease.

About 750,000 cases of septic shock occur each year in the United States, according to the National Institutes of Health. It kills 40 percent of the adults and 25 percent of the children who contract it.

Septic shock occurs when a person is overwhelmed by a massive bacterial or fungal infection. In response, the body's immune system floods the bloodstream with infection-fighting chemicals.

However, these chemicals also cause widespread inflammation throughout the body. The inflammation triggers tiny blood clots that keep nutrients and oxygen away from vital organs. The organs stop working, blood pressure plummets, and the person can die.

Dr. Fu is one of about 30 biomedical researchers at UTHSCT. In the past two years, they were awarded more than $25 million in research dollars to support their world-class programs investigating lung disease, cancer, tuberculosis, diabetes, and aging. The NIH provided over $11 million of those funds.

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