Stopping sepsis by targeting sphingosine kinase 1.
Sci Transl Med 2(36):36ps29 (2010) PMID 20555020
Each year, more than a half million people in the United States alone die from sepsis, a dire multisystem disease with highly inadequate treatment options. In a recent issue of Science, Puneet and colleagues provide compelling evidence that inhibiting sphingosine kinase 1--an enzyme that resides in immune cells and is activated by inflammatory signals--might have great potential as a therapy for septic shock.
DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.3001299
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