Microbiology and Immunology

(Axel Boer) #1
WORLD OF MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY Salk, Jonas

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immunity to polio with no harmful side effects. By this time,
however, the public and much of the scientific community
were committed to the Salk vaccine. Two scientists working
for Lederle Laboratories had also developed a live-virus vac-
cine. However, the Lederle vaccine was tested in Northern
Ireland in 1956 and proved dangerous, as it sometimes
reverted to a virulent state.
Although Sabin lacked backing for a large-scale clini-
cal trial in the United States, he remained undaunted. He was
able to convince the Health Ministry in the Soviet Union to
try his vaccine in massive trials. At the time, the Soviets were
mired in a polio epidemic that was claiming eighteen to
twenty thousand victims a year. By this time, Sabin was
receiving the political backing of the World Health
Organizationin Geneva, Switzerland, which had previously
been using Salk’s vaccine to control the outbreak of polio
around the world; they now believed that Sabin’s approach
would one day eradicate the disease.
Sabin began giving his vaccine to Russian children in
1957, inoculating millions over the next several years. Not to
be outdone by Salk’s public relations expertise, Sabin began
to travel extensively, promoting his vaccine through newspa-
per articles, issued statements, and scientific meetings. In
1960, the U.S. Public Health Service, finally convinced of
Sabin’s approach, approved his vaccine for manufacture in
the United States. Still, the PHS would not order its use and
the Salk vaccine remained the vaccine of choice until a pedi-
atrician in Phoenix, Arizona, Richard Johns, organized a
Sabin vaccine drive. The vaccine was supplied free of charge,
and many physicians provided their services without a fee on
a chosen Sunday. The success of this effort spread, and
Sabin’s vaccine soon became “the vaccine” to ward off polio.
The battle between Sabin and Salk persisted well into
the 1970s, with Salk writing an op-ed piece for the New York
Times in 1973 denouncing Sabin’s vaccine as unsafe and urg-
ing people to use his vaccine once more. For the most part,
Salk was ignored, and by 1993, health organizations began to
report that polio was close to extinction in the Western
Hemisphere.
Sabin continued to work vigorously and tirelessly into
his seventies, traveling to Brazil in 1980 to help with a new
outbreak of polio. He antagonized Brazilian officials, how-
ever, by accusing the government bureaucracy of falsifying
data concerning the serious threat that polio still presented in
that country. He officially retired from the National Institute of
Health in 1986. Despite his retirement, Sabin continued to be
outspoken, saying in 1992 that he doubted whether a vaccine
against the human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV, was feasi-
ble. Sabin died from congestive heart failure at the
Georgetown University Medical Center on March 3, 1993. In
an obituary in the Lancet,Sabin was noted as the “architect”
behind the eradication of polio from North and South
America. Salk issued a statement praising Sabin’s work to
vanquish polio.

See alsoAntibody and antigen; Antibody formation and kinet-
ics; History of immunology; History of public health;
Poliomyelitis and polio

SSaccharomyces cerevisiaeACCHAROMYCES CEREVISIAE

Unicellular Fungi(YeastPhylum) are one of the most studied
single-cell Eukaryotes. Among them, Saccharomyces cere-
visiaeis perhaps the biological model most utilized for decades
in order for scientists to understand the molecular anatomy and
physiology of eukaryotic cells, such as membrane and trans-
membrane receptors, cell cyclecontrols, and enzymesand pro-
teins involved in signal transductionto the nucleus.
Many strands of S. cerevisiaeare used by the wine and
beer industry for fermentation. S. cerevisiaeis a member of the
group of budding yeasts that replicate (reproduce) through the
formation of an outgrowth in the parental cell known as a bud.
After nuclear division into two daughter nuclei, one nucleus
migrates to the bud, which continues to grow until it breaks off
to form an independent daughter cell. Most eukaryotic cells
undergo symmetric cell division, resulting in two daughter
cells with the same size. In budding yeast, however, cell divi-
sion is asymmetric and produces at cell separation a large
parental cell and a small daughter cell. Moreover, after sepa-
ration, the parental cell starts the production of a new bud,
whereas the daughter cell continues to grow into its mature
size before producing its own bud. Cell cycle times are also
different between parental and young daughter cells. Parental
(or mother cells) have a cell cycle of 100 minutes, whereas
daughter cells in the growing process have a cycle time of 146
minutes from birth to first budding division.
The study of cell cycle controls, enzymatic systems of
DNArepair, programmed cell death, and DNAmutationsin S.
cerevisiaeand S. pombegreatly contributed to the understand-
ing of pre-malignant cell transformations and the identifica-
tion of genes involved in carcinogenesis. They constitute ideal
biological models for these studies because they change the
cellular shape in each phase of the cell cycle and in case of
genetic mutation, the position defect is easily identified and
related to the specific phase of the cell cycle. Such mutations
are known as cdc mutations (cell division cycle mutations).

See alsoCell cycle (eukaryotic), genetic regulation of; Yeast
genetics

SSalk, Jonas ALK, JONAS(1914-1995)

American physician

Jonas Salk was one of the United States’s best-known micro-
biologists, chiefly celebrated for his discovery of his polio
vaccine. Salk’s greatest contribution to immunologywas the
insight that a “killed virus” is capable of serving as an antigen,
prompting the body’s immune systemto produce antibodies
that will attack invading organisms. This realization enabled
Salk to develop a polio vaccine composed of killed polio
viruses, producing the necessary antibodies to help the body
to ward off the disease without itself inducing polio.
The eldest son of Orthodox Jewish-Polish immigrants,
Jonas Edward Salk was born in East Harlem, New York, on
October 28, 1914. His father, Daniel B. Salk, was a garment
worker, who designed lace collars and cuffs and enjoyed

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