Microbiology and Immunology

(Axel Boer) #1
History of Public Health WORLD OF MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY

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the organism in pure culture. While limiting dilutions could
have been used (as described previously by Joseph Lister,
1827–1912), Koch promoted the use of solid media, giving
rise to separate colonies and the use of stains. In 1882, Koch
identified the tubercle bacillus and so formalized the criteria
of Henle for distinguishing causative pathogenic microbes.
This set of criteria is known as Koch’s postulates.
One of the most important applied developments in
microbiology was in understanding the nature of specific
acquired immunityto disease. That such immunity was possi-
ble was known for a long time, and the knowledge finally
crystallized with the prophylactic treatment for smallpox
introduced by Edward Jenner(1749–1823). Using cowpox,
Jenner introduced the first vaccination procedures in 1796.
This occurred long before the germ theory of disease had been
established. Later workers developed additional methods of
increasing the immunity of an individual to disease, but the
most dramatic triumph was the discovery of the diphtheriaand
tetanusantitoxins by von Behring and Kitisato in the 1890s.
This work later developed into a practical tool by Paul Ehrlich
(1854–1915) and it was now possible to cure a person suffer-
ing from these diseases by injecting some antitoxic serum pre-
pared by earlier immunizationof a horse or other large animal.
This led for the first time to rational cures for infectious dis-

eases, and was responsible for Ehrlich’s later conception of
chemotherapy. The antibiotics era, which followed the
groundbreaking work of Alexander Fleming(1881–1955) with
penicillin, was another important step in the understanding of
microbiology.
Most of the most recent work in the development of
microbiology has been in the field of microbial geneticsand
how it evolved into a separate discipline known as molecular
biology. This work really began in the 1940s, when Oswald
Avery, Colin MacLeodand Maclyn McCartydemonstrated that
the transforming principle in bacteria, previously observed by
Frederick Griffiths in 1928, was DNA. Joshua Lederbergand
Edward Tatumdemonstrated that DNA could be transferred
from one bacterium to another in 1944. With the determination
of the structure of DNA in 1953, a new and practical aspect of
microbiology suddenly became realised, and the foundations
of genetic engineering were laid. It is perhaps important to
realize that if it were not for bacteria and their characteristics,
genetic engineering would not be possible. The concept of
DNA transfer was essentially born in the 1940s. Later on, in
the late 1960s bacterial restriction enzymeswere discovered
and the possibilities of splicing and rearranging DNA
emerged. The advances in molecular biology following these
major breakthroughs have been immense but it is important to
realize that the field of microbiology lies at their root.

See also Antibiotics; Fermentation; Microscope and
microscopy; Vaccine

HHistory of Public HealthISTORY OFPUBLICHEALTH

Infections caused by microorganismsare often spread more
easily in an unsanitary environment. Even today, for example,
Escherichia coliinfections of food and between people are
still commonly caused by poor hygienic practices, such as the
failure to properly wash hands after toileting.
Because of the association between microbial infection
and sanitary conditions, many public healthinitiatives and
regulations have been instituted around the world. Before the
recognition that microbes caused infections, and even before
the realization that microbes existed, public health was a for-
eign concept. The history of public health parallels advances
in the understanding of microorganisms and disease.
Prior to the fourteenth century, public health was nonex-
istent. The sanitary environment in urban centers was appalling
by today’s standards. However, at that time there was no
knowledge that, for example, the flow of raw sewage alongside
streets was connected to illness. The occurrence of bubonic
plaguein Europe in 1348 began to change this view. Between
1348 and 1350, the infection caused by Yersinia pestiskilled
almost two-thirds of the population in the major urban centers
of Europe. In the aftermath of this devastation came an
increased awareness of the influence of health conditions and
disease. In the 1350s, Italian government initiatives sought to
improve sanitary and living conditions. These initiatives
occurred even though the existence of microorganisms was not

Robert Koch in his laboratory in the late nineteenth century.

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