In his lessons ??lie
Metchnikoff taught probably the disappearing of "phagocytes" so
the essence of aids/hiv was known befor KOCH
*
*this
is history ?;Why should we make so much troubles??*?lie*
Metchnikoff++Russian+++
biologist Russian in full +**
Ilya****
Ilich Mechnikov**+ +
Main
born May 16, 1845, near Kharkov, Ukraine, Russian Empire [now
Kharkiv, Ukraine] died July 16, 1916, Paris, France
Russian
zoologist and microbiologist who received (with
Paul
Ehrlich) the 1908
Nobel
Prize for Physiology or Medicine for his discovery in
animals of amoeba-like cells that engulf foreign
bodies such as bacteria-a phenomenon known as
phagocytosis
and a fundamental part of the immune response.
Metchnikoff received his bachelor's degree from the University of
Kharkov (1864) and completed his doctoral degree at the University
of St. Petersburg (1868). He served as professor of zoology and
comparative anatomy at the University of Odessa (1870-82). In
Messina, Italy (1882-86), while studying the origin of digestive
organs in bipinnaria starfish larvae, he observed that certain
cells unconnected with digestion surrounded and engulfed carmine
dye particles and splinters that he had introduced into the bodies
of the larvae. He ca
phagocytes
(from Greek words meaning "devouring cells") and named the process
phagocytosis.
Working at the Bacteriological Institute, Odessa (1886-87),
and at the Pasteur Institute, Paris (1888-1916), Metchnikoff
contributed to many important disco
immune
response. Perhaps his most notable achievement was his
recognition that the phagocyte is the first line of defense against
acute infection in most animals, including humans, whose phagocytes
are one type of
leukocyte,
or white blood cell. This work formed the basis of Metchnikoff's
cellular (phagocytic) theory of immunity (1892), a hypothesis that
engendered much opposition, particularly from scientists who
claimed that only body fluids and soluble substances in the blood
(antibodies)-and not cells-destroyed invading microorganisms (the
humoral theory of immunity). Although the humoral theory held sway
for the next 50 years, in the 1940s scientists began to reexamine
the role cells play in fighting off infections. Eventually
Metchnikoff's theory of cellular immunity was vindicated when
aspects of both schools of thought became integrated in the modern
understanding of immunity.
Metchnikoff devoted the last decade of his life to
investigating means of increasing
human longevity and advocating the consumption
of lactic acid-producing bacteria. He wrote +
Le?ons
++*
sur la pathologie compar?e de l'inflammation*+ (1892;
+Lectures on the Comparative Pathology of
+
Inflammation++), ++L'Immunit?+++ +dans les
maladies infectieuses++ (1901; ++Immunity in Infectious
Diseases++), and ++?tudes+++ +sur la nature humaine++ (1903; ++The
Nature of Man++).
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Citations
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