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Scott A. Summers

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Scott Andrew Summers
Born

Scott Andrew Summers (born 1967 in Decatur, Illinois) is an American scientist and professor at the University of Utah. He co-founded Centaurus Therapeutics, a biotechnology company that develops novel ceramide-reducing therapies to treat cardiometabolic disease.

Education

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Summers completed his BS degree at Indiana University, PhD at Southern Illinois University, and postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Pennsylvania.

Career

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Summers is known for discovering that a class of fat metabolites called ceramides contribute to the tissue dysfunction that underlies diabetes and its comorbidities.[1][2] Though the idea was initially controversial, it has gained traction within the medical community, to the extent that blood ceramides are now measured clinically as markers of cardiometabolic disease risk.[3][4][5]

After running laboratories in Singapore and Australia for 8 years, Summers returned to the USA and the University of Utah in 2016 to chair a new Department of Nutrition and Integrative Physiology and serve as the Co-Director (with Jared Rutter, HHMI) of the Utah Diabetes and Metabolism Research Center.[6] Summers was named William J. Rutter, PhD, Presidential Endowed Chair of Biochemistry in 2021[7] and a University of Utah Distinguished Professor in 2022.[8]

Selected publications

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References

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  1. ^ MacDonald, Cara. "U researchers make tiny change in metabolism of mice, successfully reverse prediabetes". KSL-TV.
  2. ^ "Here's how Utah researchers prevented diabetes in cookie-dough-fed mice". Deseret News. 8 July 2019.
  3. ^ "Blocking an enzyme keeps mice from getting diabetes". American Chemical Society.
  4. ^ "Therapeutics that target ceramides may help treat cardiometabolic disease". News-Medical.net. 7 November 2021.
  5. ^ "Type 2 diabetes caused by buildup of toxic fat, study suggests". Medical News Today. 4 November 2016.
  6. ^ "SCOTT SUMMERS, PhD". The University of Utah.
  7. ^ "William J. Rutter Endowed Chair in Biochemistry". University of Utah.
  8. ^ Shebek, Sarah. "Scott Summers, PhD, Named Distinguished Professor in the College of Health". University of Utah.
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