Microbiology and Immunology

(Axel Boer) #1
INTRODUCTION

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Although microbiology and immunology are fundamen-
tally separate areas of biology and medicine, they combine to
provide a powerful understanding of human health and dis-
ease—especially with regard to infectious disease, disease
prevention, and tragically, of the growing awareness that
bioterrorism is a real and present worldwide danger.
World of Microbiology and Immunologyis a collection of
600 entries on topics covering a range of interests—from biog-
raphies of the pioneers of microbiology and immunology to
explanations of the fundamental scientific concepts and latest
research developments. In many universities, students in the
biological sciences are not exposed to microbiology or
immunology courses until the later half of their undergraduate
studies. In fact, many medical students do not receive their
first formal training in these subjects until medical school.
Despite the complexities of terminology and advanced knowl-
edge of biochemistry and genetics needed to fully explore
some of the topics in microbiology and immunology, every
effort has been made to set forth entries in everyday language
and to provide accurate and generous explanations of the most
important terms. The editors intend World of Microbiology
and Immunologyfor a wide range of readers. Accordingly, the
articles are designed to instruct, challenge, and excite less
experienced students, while providing a solid foundation and
reference for more advanced students. The editors also intend
that World of Microbiology and Immunologybe a valuable
resource to the general reader seeking information fundamen-
tal to understanding current events.
Throughout history, microorganisms have spread deadly
diseases and caused widespread epidemics that threatened and
altered human civilization. In the modern era, civic sanitation,
water purification, immunization, and antibiotics have dramat-
ically reduced the overall morbidity and the mortality of dis-
ease in advanced nations. Yet much of the world is still rav-
aged by disease and epidemics, and new threats constantly
appear to challenge the most advanced medical and public
health systems. For all our science and technology, we are far
from mastering the microbial world.

During the early part of the twentieth century, the science
of microbiology developed somewhat independently of other
biological disciplines. Although for many years it did not exist
as a separate discipline at all—being an “off-shoot” of chem-
istry (fermentation science) or medicine—with advances in
techniques such as microscopy and pure culturing methodolo-
gies, as well as with the establishment of the germ theory of
disease and the rudiments of vaccination, microbiology sud-
denly exploded as a separate discipline. Whereas other biolog-
ical disciplines were concerned with such topics as cell struc-
ture and function, the ecology of plants and animals, the repro-
duction and development of organisms, the nature of heredity
and the mechanisms of evolution, microbiology had a very dif-
ferent focus. It was concerned primarily with the agents of
infectious disease, the immune response, the search for
chemotherapeutic agents and bacterial metabolism. Thus,
from the very beginning, microbiology as a science had social
applications. A more detailed historical perspective of the
development of the field may be found in the article “History
of Microbiology” in this volume.
Microbiology established a closer relationship with other
biological disciplines in the 1940s because of its association
with genetics and biochemistry. This association also laid the
foundations for the subsequent and still rapidly developing
field of genetic engineering, which holds promise of profound
impact on science and medicine.
Microorganisms are extremely useful experimental sub-
jects because they are relatively simple, grow rapidly, and can
be cultured in large quantities. George W. Beadle and Edward
L. Tatum studied the relationship between genes and enzymes
in 1941 using mutants of the bread mold Neurospora. In 1943
Salvador Luria and Max Delbrück used bacterial mutants to
show that gene mutations were apparently spontaneous and
not directed by the environment. Subsequently, Oswald
Avery, Colin M. MacLeod, and Maclyn McCarty provided
strong evidence that DNA was the genetic material and car-
ried genetic information during transformation. The interac-
tions between microbiology, genetics, and biochemistry soon

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