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.

Scott Andrew Summers
Born

Education

edit

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

Career

edit

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

edit

References

edit
  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.
edit