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Alexander Fleming and Penicillin: The Accidental Discovery?

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Title: Alexander Fleming and Penicillin: The Accidental Discovery?


1
Alexander Fleming and Penicillin The Accidental
Discovery?
By Joanna Martin
2
A Clinical Case
  • A 48 year old policeman presents to Urgent Care
    with a small cut on his face after shaving
  • The cut is slightly red and draining a small
    amount of pus
  • Before the 1940s this small, infected cut could
    lead to a swift death

3
The Discovery of Penicillin One of the Most
Important Events in Medical History
  • For the first time, doctors had a way to treat
    infections and miraculously save lives
  • Prior to the discovery of penicillin patients
    often died from trivial injuries or infections
  • Today in the United States, deaths by infectious
    bacterial diseases are one-twentieth what they
    were in 1900

4
Prior to Penicillin
  • Physicians had little ability to help patients
    suffering from infection

5
Physicians could only watch and wait hoping a
patients immune system could topple an
infection
  • The Doctor by Sir Luke Fildes

6
Fungus as Treatment
  • Folk remedies using fungi have been used for
    thousands of years
  • 3000 years ago, the Chinese were using moldy
    soybean curd on boils and other skin infections

7
Our story begins . . .
  • Alexander Fleming was born in Lochfield Scotland
    in 1881, the son of a pig farmer

8
Flemings Childhood
  • The seventh of eight children, Fleming received a
    very good education and was able to attend the
    University of London on scholarship

9
Fleming gets an MD
  • Fleming was left money after his uncle died and
    his older brother (already an MD) recommended he
    go to medical school
  • Fleming got very high scores on his entrance
    exams and was able to choose from three medical
    schools
  • He chose St Marys in London because he had once
    played water polo against them

10
Career Choices
  • Fleming graduated from medical school in 1906 at
    the age of 25
  • He was offered a job as research assistant at the
    inoculation department at St Marys Hospital in
    London not just for his medical background but
    also because he was a very good shot his
    shooting skills would strengthen the hospitals
    rifle team

11
St Marys Hospital
12
St Marys Hospital Lab
  • Fleming was working for Sir Almroth Wright who
    had discovered an anti-typhoid vaccine in 1896
  • Both Fleming and Wright went to France during WWI
    to treat wounded soldiers and saw firsthand there
    was no effective treatment for most infections

13
Flemings Personality
  • Unlike Wright who had an arrogant, forceful
    personality, Fleming was a shy man
  • Fleming also was a lackluster lecturer who was
    described by one student as a shocking lecturer,
    the worst you could possibly imagine
  • Nevertheless, Fleming inspired many by his future
    work

14
Treating Syphilis
  • Incidentally, St Marys was one of the first
    places salvarsan was used to treat syphilis
  • Fleming had published on this topic and was
    considered an expert at administrating salvarsan
  • If fact, Fleming made quite a bit of extra income
    treating members of the London Arts community for
    syphilis
  • Often, artists would give him paintings as
    payment for his services
  • Flemings background in administering salvarsan
    exposed him to the ill-effects of substances that
    interfere with natural host defense processes

15
The Discovery of Lysozyme
  • In 1922 Fleming described lysozyme
  • Lysozymes are enzymes present in diverse
    materials such as tears, mucous, egg whites etc
    that cause bacteria to lyse
  • His lysozyme research grew out of his interest in
    showing the ineffectiveness of chemical
    antiseptics to treat infection

16
Chemical Antiseptics
  • The idea of using chemical antiseptics to kill
    germs was a revolutionary idea of the late 19th
    century popularized by Joseph Lister
  • Lister was a Scottish surgeon, influenced by
    Pasteur, who believed that germs caused infection

Lister (1827-1912)
17
Lister continued . . .
  • In 1874 he developed the method of using carbolic
    acid to kill germs and prevent wound infections
    after surgery
  • Listers theories revolutionized surgery
  • Lister argued that antiseptics could also be used
    on wounds to kill bacteria

18
Fleming Disagrees
  • Based on Listers theory, physicians of the time
    generally believed that if antiseptics killed
    germs they were therefore useful in treating
    wound infections
  • Fleming strongly disagreed with this idea
  • Fleming and his mentor, Wright, argued that the
    best way to treat wound infections was to enhance
    the bodys natural immune response

19
A Revolutionary Approach to Wound Care
  • Fleming and Wright noted that, although
    antiseptics kill bacteria, they also kill
    leukocytes of the immune system more rapidly than
    they kill invading bacteria
  • They recommended using saline solution to cleanse
    wounds instead of antiseptic solutions

20
Lysozyme Research
  • Few accepted Wright and Flemings recommendation
    for wound care
  • This rejection fueled Flemings search for
    antibacterial agents and particularly his
    interest in lysozyme
  • Like leukocytes, lysozyme was an endogenous way
    to treat infections
  • Fleming believed that the best way to treat wound
    infections was to enhance the bodys natural
    immune response

21
Lysozyme continued
  • In 1922 Fleming described lysozyme when he noted
    that lysozyme-containing material would interfere
    with the growth of bacterial cultures
  • Fleming found that a culture of his own nasal
    mucous inhibited the growth of staph cultured
    from that same mucous

22
Lysozymes continued
  • Fleming was fortunate in that the strain of
    bacteria he was culturing was particularly
    sensitive to lysozyme
  • However, Fleming was disappointed in that the
    bacteria most susceptible to lysozyme were those
    that arent as infectious in humans

23
Making the Connections
  • Flemings background with lysozyme research
    prepared him for his next major discovery

24
Disorganization Leads to Genius
  • Fleming had a notoriously disorganized lab

25
Discovery . . .
  • In 1928 after returning to his lab following a
    two week vacation Fleming encountered the place
    in its usual disarray
  • Fleming had a inoculated a number of petri dishes
    with staphylococci prior to leaving on vacation
  • He hadnt placed them in an incubator because he
    knew that the staph would sufficiently multiply
    over the long vacation
  • Little did he know that penicillium mold grows
    well at room temperature

26
Flemings observation
  • Fleming returned to his lab to find many of his
    culture plates contaminated with fungus
  • He immediately started preparing to clean all his
    plates but it happened that a former member of
    his lab was visiting that day
  • Fleming took some of the contaminated cultures to
    show his visitor and thats when he noticed the
    inhibition zone around the fungus

27
Flemings Observation cont.
  • Fleming was not very knowledgeable about fungi
    but knew that the mold in his dish was a species
    of penicillin
  • Eventually determined to be Penicillium notatum

28
Accidental?
  • Flemings observation was made under some
    accidental circumstances but clearly made sense
    in light of Flemings research background
  • Fleming had the sophistication to realize that
    anti-bacterial agents existed this view was
    really fueled by his background in lysozyme
    research

29
The Power of Penicillin
  • It was obvious to Fleming that penicillin was
    much more powerful than lysozymes because his
    crude extracts could be diluted 1000 times and
    still be effective in killing bacteria

30
1929 Paper
  • In 1929 Fleming published a paper detailing his
    discovery
  • This was also a crucial moment because his ideas
    reached a large audience
  • But it wasnt until ten years later that other
    scientists began trying to use penicillin to
    treat clinical disease

31
1929-1931
  • Fleming continued to work on and off with
    penicillin during this time but was never able to
    produce it in quantities necessary for practical
    testing or applications
  • Fleming found that many of his cultures were
    unstable and stopped producing mold after eight
    days
  • Interestingly, Fleming initially conceived of
    penicillin as a topical agent and did not think
    of using it as an injectable or ingestible
    medication

32
Flemings Research
  • Fleming did inject one rabbit and one mouse with
    penicillin to make sure there were no ill effects
    (there were none) but never injected these
    animals with a simultaneous bacterial strain
  • Ironically, even though Fleming was an expert at
    administering intravenous salvarsan to syphilis
    patients, he only thought of penicillin as an
    external germicide
  • Fleming, in his 1929 article, compares
    penicillins effects to carbolic acid
    (anti-septic favored by Lister and his followers
    for treating wound infections)

33
Fleming Moves On
  • Fleming, when asked why he abandoned his initial
    research, noted that his preparations quickly
    lost their antibacterial effects
  • He lacked the help of a biochemist to assist him
    with penicillin extraction
  • Wright wouldnt allow the presence of a
    biochemist is the lab because he thought chemists
    lacked humanism

34
Dr. Cecil Paine and Mold Juice
  • Paine - student of Fleming who was first to
    demonstrate the value of penicillin in medicine
  • After reading Flemings article, Paine obtained
    from Fleming a sample of the PCN mold, made
    cultures and used it to treat the lacerated eye
    of a local miner. The miner still had a piece of
    the stone in his eye with a severe pneumococcal
    infection
  • Paine irrigated the eye with crude PCN extract
    mold juice and the patients eye was saved
  • Paine also irrigated the eyes of a baby born to a
    mother with gonorrhea and saved the childs eyes

35
The Players Assemble
  • Paine never published his results but did share
    them with Dr. Howard Florey at Oxford who became
    actively interested in penicillin in the 1930s
  • Coincidentally, a researcher at Oxford Ms.
    Campbell-Renton had some of Flemings original
    mold passed down to her from an old boss who had
    used it for some unsuccessful research
  • Dr Ernst Chain, a talented biochemist who fled
    Nazi Germany, persuaded by Dr. Florey to join his
    Oxford team

36
Florey and Chain
37
The Players Assemble, continued
  • Chain accidentally bumped into Cambell-Renton in
    the hall one day while she was carrying a flask
    of Flemings mold
  • Chain went to Florey with the idea to research
    biochemical and biological properties of
    antibacterial substances produced by
    microorganisms
  • Funding was obtained and research began

38
Florey, Chain continued
  • Soon after beginning his research, Chain
    discovered that penicillin was not an enzyme but
    a molecule
  • He was intrigued by the fact that penicillin was
    a very unstable molecule
  • Chain was able to freeze- dry the penicillin and
    produce a stable brown powder
  • Tested on mice, a huge dose proved safe

39
Florey, Chain continued
  • Another important observation was that the
    penicillin powder turned the mices urine brown
    it passed unaltered and without loss of effects
    into the urine
  • This meant that PCN could pass through the body
    and fight infections wherever they were
  • The Oxford team was ecstatic about their
    discovery and began work immediately to prove
    their findings were correct

40
Experimental Testing
  • Florey next experimented with mice and lethal
    doses of streptococci
  • Eight mice were injected with the bacteria and
    only four mice received penicillin prior to the
    bacterial injection the four PCN mice
    survived and the others all died
  • The first landmark paper detailing the mice
    experiments were published in August 1940

41
Timing
  • England was very close to jeopardy at this point
    in WWII and members of this Oxford team all
    rubbed penicillin mold on the inside of their
    clothing fearing that if Germany should invade
    and occupy Britain one might be able to escape to
    North America with mold spores!
  • They know that PCN had the potential to save
    millions of lives

42
Human Testing
  • After the researchers were confident that PCN was
    safe in mice they began human testing
  • 48 y/o policeman with bacterial sepsis after
    cutting himself while shaving improved
    dramatically after treatment with the PCN but he
    required such high doses that the supply was
    quickly gone
  • The researches even tried to recrystallize the
    PCN from this patients urine to give back to him
    but the patient didnt survive

43
Human Testing Continued
  • The researchers continued but changed their
    patient focus to small children thinking they
    required less PCN for good outcomes
  • Almost all the children were miraculously cured
    of infection

44
Mass Production of Penicillin
  • Penicillin Production began in Britain on a small
    scale in 1941
  • The British government encouraged the development
    of a number of small production facilities at
    this time. Large scale companies could easily be
    bombed by German war planes.

45
Production in North America
  • Floreys visited the US and Canada with a vial of
    the sample mold July 1941
  • It was recommended by an American professor that
    Florey meet with the head of the USDA research
    laboratory in Peoria, IL Dr. Robert Coghill
  • Coghill suggested deep fermentation would likely
    make the production of penicillin more efficient
    and convenient

46
Mass Production and Peoria
  • The search was on for even better sources for
    penicillin producing Penicillium
  • The best specimen was mold found on a cantaloupe
    purchased at a Peoria market
  • Penicillium chrysogenum

47
Production Accelerates
  • From January to May 1943 only 400 million units
    of penicillin had been made
  • By the time the war ended US companies were
    making 650 billion units a month!

48
Infections and World War
  • During WWI the death rate from pneumonia in the
    US Army totaled 18
  • During WWII the death rate fell to less than 1

49
Awards
  • Fleming and Florey were knighted in 1944
  • Chain was later knighted in 1965
  • The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was
    awarded to Fleming, Florey and Chain in 1945

50
Drug resistance
  • Although the discovery of penicillin is arguably
    one the greatest discoveries of humankind, drug
    resistance poses an enormous problem
  • In 1994, 13,300 patients died of drug-resistant
    bacterial infections

51
Modern Day Treatments
  • A 48 year old policeman presents to Urgent Care
    with a small cut on his face after shaving
  • Today prescribe antibiotics

52
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