Decoding a protein to fend off sepsis.Sepsis 1. presence in the blood or other tissues of pathogenic microorganisms or their toxins. 2. septicemia. catheter sepsis sepsis occurring as a complication of intravenous catheterization. puerperal sepsis that occurring after childbirth. is a lethal blood disorder that typically arises from bacterial infections. It's marked by organ damage caused by inflammation and blood vessel leakage. A synthetic version of activated protein C (ACP) is the sole drug approved to specifically attack sepsis, but it only slightly reduces the risk of death. Scientists had suggested that APC APC - American Power ConversionAPC - Armored Personnel Carrier APC - A Perfect Circle (band) APC - A Professional Corporation APC - Abbreviated Performance Characteristics APC - Academic Personnel Committee APC - Academic Planning Committee APC - Accelerometer Pulse Converter APC - Accident Prevention Council APC - Account(ing) Processing Code APC - Acquisition Planning Conference APC - Acquisition Position Categories works by protecting healthy cells from dying and had found it to have anti-coagulant coagulant /co·ag·u·lant/ (ko-ag´u-lint) promoting or accelerating coagulation of blood; an agent that so acts. co·ag·u·lant (k - effects. A study in mice now finds that the anticoagulant circulating anticoagulant a substance in the blood which inhibits normal blood clotting and may cause a hemorrhagic syndrome. lupus anticoagulant a circulating anticoagulant that inhibits the conversion of prothrombin to thrombin; it paradoxically increases the risk of thromboembolism and is seen in some cases of systemic lupus erythematosus. property isn't APC's key attribute-in fact, it might even be a shortcoming. Instead, APC's value stems from its ability to attach to two proteins on the surface of cells. By binding to these two receptors, APC inhibits a death signal in a cell, says biologist Harmut Weiler of the BloodCenter of Wisconsin in Milwaukee. Weiler notes that the two affected receptors are commonly found on cells that make up blood vessels. He and his colleagues report that in mice with sepsis treated with APC, animals that lacked the two receptors were more likely to die than were mice that had the receptors. "This is a trailblazing study," says Khanti R. Rai, a physician at the Long Island Jewish Medical Center in New Hyde Park, N.Y. It argues for maintaining the integrity of vessel walls in fighting sepsis, he says. Weiler's group also discovered a danger of APC'S anticoagulant effect Mice infected with Staphylococcus aureus all died from sepsis, despite treatment with standard APC. But when given APC that had been altered to lack the anticoagulant stimulus, nearly all the mice survived. The findings could eventually lead to a modified, more potent version of APC, Weiler says. An APC molecule without anti-coagulant properties might enable doctors to prescribe larger doses, he says.--N.S. |
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