Ehrlich , Paul

Ehrlich , Paul
(1854–1915) German physician, bacteriologist, and chemist
Born in Strehlen (now Strzelin in Poland), Ehrlich studied medicine at the universities of Breslau, Strasbourg, and Freiburg, gaining a physician's degree at Breslau in 1878. For the next nine years he worked at the Charité Hospital, Berlin, on many topics including typhoid fever, tuberculosis, and pernicious anemia. He was awarded the title of professor by the Prussian Ministry of Education in 1884 for his impressive work in these fields. In 1887 he became a teacher at the University of Berlin but was not paid because of the antisemitic feeling at the time – Ehrlich would not renounce his Jewish upbringing. As a result of his laboratory work he contracted tuberculosis and was not restored to health until 1890, when he set up his own small research laboratory at Steglitz on the outskirts of Berlin.
In 1890 Robert Koch announced the discovery of tuberculin and suggested its use in preventing and curing tuberculosis. He asked Ehrlich to work on it with him at the Moabit Hospital in Berlin. Ehrlich accepted and for six years studied TB and cholera. In 1896 he accepted the post of director of the new Institute for Serum Research and Serum Investigation at Steglitz and in 1899 moved to the Institute of Experimental Therapy in Frankfurt. Here he investigated African sleeping sickness and syphilis along with his other studies. In 1908 he was awarded the Nobel Prize for physiology or medicine for his work on immunity and serum therapy.
Two years later he announced his most famous discovery, Salvarsan – a synthetic chemical that was effective against syphilis – and until the end of his life he worked on the problems associated with the treatment of patients using this compound of arsenic.
Ehrlich is considered to be the founder of modern chemotherapy because he developed systematic scientific techniques to search for new synthetic chemicals that could specifically attack disease-causing microorganisms. Ehrlich sought for these ‘magic bullets’ by carefully altering the chemical structure of dye molecules that selectively stained the microorganisms observable in his microscope but did not stain cells in the host. He was persevering and optimistic – Salvarsan (compound number 606) was not ‘rediscovered’ until almost 1000 compounds had been synthesized and tried. He made and tested about 3000 compounds based on the structure of Salvarsan in an attempt to make a drug that was bacteriocidal to streptococci.

Scientists. . 2011.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • EHRLICH, PAUL — (1854–1915), German chemist, pioneer of modern histology, immunology, and chemotherapy; Nobel Prize winner. Ehrlich was born in Strehlen near Breslau. He studied at German universities and began his scientific work in 1878 in Berlin University as …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Ehrlich, Paul — Médico alemán nacido en 1854. Fue alumno de R. Koch y se le considera el fundador de la quimioterapia; además hizo profundos estudios sobre los anticuerpos. Su obra más destacada es Über Toxine und Antitoxine. En 1908 recibió el premio Nobel de… …   Diccionario médico

  • Ehrlich, Paul — born March 14, 1854, Strehlen, Silesia, Prussia died Aug. 20, 1915, Bad Homburg vor der Höhe, Ger. German medical scientist. After early work on distribution of foreign substances in the body and on cell nutrition, he found uses for staining… …   Universalium

  • Ehrlich, Paul R — ▪ American biologist and educator born May 29, 1932, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.       American biologist and educator who in 1990 shared Sweden s Crafoord Prize (established in 1980 and awarded by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, to support… …   Universalium

  • Ehrlich, Paul — (1854–1915)    German bacteriologist and Nobel laureate, 1908. As a research student, Silesian born Ehrlich discovered several bacterial stains, and also a new variety of white blood corpuscles. Working with Koch on staining tubercle bacillus, he …   Who’s Who in Jewish History after the period of the Old Testament

  • Ehrlich, Paul — ► (1854 1915) Médico alemán. Fue premio Nobel de Medicina y Fisiología en 1908 por sus estudios en microbiología. * * * (14 mar. 1854, Strehlen, Silesia, Prusia–20 ago. 1915, Bad Homburg vor der Höhe, Alemania). Científico médico alemán. Después… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Ehrlich,Paul — Ehr·lich (ârʹlĭKH), Paul. 1854 1915. German bacteriologist. He shared a 1908 Nobel Prize for discoveries and advances in immunology. * * * …   Universalium

  • Ehrlich, Paul — (1854 1915)    German scientist. Born in Silesia, he discovered bacterial strains and also a new variety of white blood corpuscles as a research student. Later he became a professor at the University of Berlin. In 1908 he shared the Nobel Prize… …   Dictionary of Jewish Biography

  • Ehrlich, Paul R(alph) — born May 29, 1932, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S. U.S. biologist. He studied at the University of Kansas and taught at Stanford University from 1959. Though much of his research was done in entomology, his overriding concern became unchecked population… …   Universalium

  • Ehrlich, Paul R(alph) — (n. 29 may. 1932, Filadelfia, Pa., EE.UU.). Biólogo estadounidense. Estudió en la Universidad de Kansas y fue docente en la Universidad de Stanford desde 1959. Aunque gran parte de su investigación la hizo en entomología, se interesó sobre todo… …   Enciclopedia Universal

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”