From Inotek Corporation (PJ, FGS, LV, LL, JM, ES, GH, AM, EB, JV, ALS, GJS, CS), Beverly, MA; the Department of Surgery (FGS, LL, CS), New Jersey Medical School, UMDNJ, Newark, NJ; Hospital das Clinicas FMUSP (FGS, CBL), Sao Paulo, Brazil; the Department of Biochemistry (FG, BS), Pécs University Medical School, Pécs, Hungary; and the College of Pharmacy (DGH), Ohio State University, Columbus, OH.
*See also p. 1163.
Poly(ADP-ribose) synthetase emerges as a drug target for the clinical treatment of shock and systemic inflammation.
Address requests for reprints to: Csaba Szabó, MD, PhD, Inotek Corporation, Suite 419E, 100 Cummings Center, Beverly, MA 01915. E-mail: [email protected]
Supported, in part, by grants R44NS37635, R01GM57407, and R44GM58986 from the Nation-al Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD; by a grant from the Hungarian Ministry of Health; by a grant from the ADUMED foundation (LL), Switzerland; by a fellowship from FAPESP (Brazil) (FGS), and by grant ETT 32/2000 from the Ministry of Health (Hungary) (FG, BS).