Microbiology and Immunology

(Axel Boer) #1
WORLD OF MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY World Health Organization (WHO)

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species and often used to kill rats; colchicine (1963), a toxic
natural product found in autumn crocus; and lysergic acid
(1954) and reserpine (1956), both psychoactive substances.
Reserpine, a tranquilizer found naturally in the Indian snake
root plant Rauwolfia,was widely used to treat mental illness
and was one of the first genuinely effective psychiatric medi-
cines. In 1960, after four years of work, Woodward synthe-
sized chlorophyll, the light energy capturing pigment in green
plants, and in 1962 he accomplished the total synthesis of a
tetracycline antibiotic.
Total synthesis requires the design and then precise
implementation of elaborate procedures composed of many
steps. Each step in a synthetic procedure either adds or subtracts
chemical groups from a starting molecule or rearranges the ori-
entation or order of the atoms in the molecule. Since it is impos-
sible, even with the utmost care, to achieve one hundred percent
conversion of starting compound to product at any given step,
the greater the number of steps, the less product is obtained.
Woodward and Doering produced approximately a half
a gram of quinine from about five pounds of starting materi-
als; they began with benzaldehyde, a simple, inexpensive
chemical obtained from coal tar, and designed a 17-step syn-
thetic procedure. The 20-step synthesis that led to the first
steroid nucleusrequired 22 lb (10 kg) of starting material and
yielded less than a twentieth of an ounce of product. The best
synthesis schemes thus have the fewest number of steps,
although for some very complicated molecules, “few” may
mean several dozen. When Woodward successfully synthe-
sized chlorophyll (which has an elaborate interconnected ring
structure), for example, he required 55 steps for the synthesis.
Woodward’s close friend, Nobel Laureate Vladimir
Prelog, helped establish the CIBA-Geigy Corporation-funded
Woodward Institute in Zurich, Switzerland, in the early
1960s. There, Woodward could work on whatever project he
chose, without the intrusion of teaching or administrative
duties. Initially, the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology had
tried to hire Woodward away from Harvard; when it failed,
the Woodward Institute provided an alternative way of ensur-
ing that Woodward visited and worked frequently in
Switzerland. In 1965, Woodward and his Swiss collaborators
synthesized Cephalosporin C, an important antibiotic. In
1971 he succeeded in synthesizing vitamin B 12 , a molecule
bearing some chemical similarity to chlorophyll, but with
cobalt instead of magnesium as the central metal atom. Until
the end of his life, Woodward worked on the synthesis of the
antibiotic erythromycin.
Woodward, who received a Nobel Prize in 1965, helped
start two organic chemistry journals, Tetrahedron Lettersand
Tetrahedron,served on the boards of several science organi-
zations, and received awards and honorary degrees from many
countries. Some of his many honors include the Davy Medal
(1959) and the Copley Medal (1978), both from the Royal
Society of Britain, and the United States’ National Medal of
Science (1964). He reached full professor status at Harvard in
1950 and in 1960 became the Donner Professor of Science.
Woodward supervised more than three hundred graduate stu-
dents and postdoctoral students throughout his career.

Woodward married Irji Pullman in 1938 and had two
daughters. He was married for the second time in 1946 to
Eudoxia Muller, who had also been a consultant at the
Polaroid Corporation. The couple had two children.
Woodward died at his home of a heart attack on July 8, 1979,
at the age of 62.

See also Biochemical analysis techniques; Biochemistry;
History of the development of antibiotics

WORLDHEALTHORGANIZATION

(WHO)World Health Organization (WHO)

The World Health Organization (WHO) is the principle inter-
national organization managing public healthrelated issues on
a global scale. Headquartered in Geneva, the WHO is com-
prised of 191 member states (e.g., countries) from around the
globe. The organization contributes to international public
health in areas including disease prevention and control, pro-
motion of good health, addressing diseases outbreaks, initia-
tives to eliminate diseases (e.g., vaccinationprograms), and
development of treatment and prevention standards.
The genesis of the WHO was in 1919. Then, just after
the end of World War I, the League of Nations was created to
promote peace and security in the aftermath of the war. One of
the mandates of the League of Nations was the prevention and
control of disease around the world. The Health Organization
of the League of Nations was established for this purpose, and
was headquartered in Geneva. In 1945, the United Nations
Conference on International Organization in San Francisco
approved a motion put forth by Brazil and China to establish
a new and independent international organization devoted to
public health. The proposed organization was meant to unite
the number of disparate health organizations that had been
established in various countries around the world.
The following year this resolution was formally enacted
at the International Health Conference in New York, and the
Constitution of the World Health organization was approved.
The Constitution came into force on April 7, 1948. The first
Director General of WHO was Dr. Brock Chisholm, a psychi-
atrist from Canada. Chisholm’s influence was evident in the
Constitution, which defines health as not merely the absence
of disease. A definition that subsequently paved the way for
WHO’s involvement in the preventative aspects of disease.
From its inception, WHO has been involved in public
health campaigns that focus on the improvement of sanitary
conditions. In 1951, the Fourth World Health Assembly
adopted a WHO document proposing new international sani-
tary regulations. Additionally, WHO mounted extensive vacci-
nation campaigns against a number of diseases of microbial
origin, including poliomyelitis, measles, diphtheria, whooping
cough, tetanus, tuberculosis, and smallpox. The latter cam-
paign has been extremely successful, with the last known nat-
ural case of smallpox having occurred in 1977. The
elimination of poliomyelitis is expected by the end of the first
decade of the twenty-first century.

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