From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
César Milstein (8 October 1927 – 24 March 2002)
was an Argentine biochemist in the field
of antibody research.
Milstein shared the Nobel Prize in
Physiology or Medicine in 1984 with Niels K. Jerne and
Georges Köhler.
Biography
Milstein was born in Bahía Blanca, Argentina, in a Jewish family. He graduated
from the University of Buenos Aires
and obtained a PhD under Professor Stoppani (Professor of Biochemistry) in the
Medical School on kinetic studies
with the enzyme aldehyde
dehydrogenase. In 1958, funded by the British Council, he joined the Biochemistry
Department at the University of Cambridge to work
for a PhD under Malcolm Dixon on the mechanism of metal
activation of the enzyme phosphoglucomutase. During this work
he collaborated with Frederick Sanger whose group he joined
with a short-term Medical Research Council
appointment.
Career
The major part of Milstein's research career was devoted to
studying the structure of antibodies and the mechanism by which
antibody diversity is generated. It was as part of this quest that
in 1975 he, together with Georges Köhler (a
postdoctoral fellow in his laboratory), developed the hybridoma technique for the production of
monoclonal antibodies—a discovery
recognised by the award of the 1984 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine.
This discovery led to an enormous expansion in the exploitation of
antibodies in science and medicine.
Milstein himself made many major contributions to improvements
and developments in monoclonal antibody technology—especially
focusing on the use of monoclonal antibodies to provide
markers that allow distinction between different cell types. He
also foresaw the potential wealth of ligand-binding reagents that
could result from applying recombinant DNA technology to monoclonal antibodies and
inspired the development of the field of antibody engineering.
Milstein's early work on antibodies focused on the nature of
their diversity at the amino acid level as well as on the
disulphide bonds by which they were held together. Part of this
work was done in collaboration with his wife, Celia. The emphasis
of his research then shifted towards the mRNA encoding antibodies
where he was able to provide the first evidence for the existence
of a precursor for these secreted polypeptides that
contained a signal sequence. The development of the hybridoma technology coupled to advances in
nucleic acid sequencing then allowed Milstein to chart the changes
that occurred in antibodies following antigen encounter. He
demonstrated the importance of somatic hypermutation of
immunoglobulin V genes in antibody affinity maturation. In this
process, localised mutation of the immunoglobulin genes allows the
production of improved antibodies which make a major contribution
to protective immunity and immunological memory. Much of his work
in recent years was devoted to characterising this mutational
process with a view to understanding its mechanism and, indeed, he
contributed a manuscript for publication on this topic less than a
week before he died. Quite apart from his own achievements,
Milstein acted as a guide and inspiration to many in the antibody
field as well as devoting himself to assisting science and
scientists in less developed countries.
He was elected a Fellow of
the Royal Society in 1975, was a fellow of Darwin College, Cambridge
from 1980 to 2002, awarded the Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize
from Columbia University in 1980, won
the Copley Medal
in 1989, and became a Companion of
Honour in 1995.
Milstein died early on 24 March 2002 in Cambridge, England at age 74 as a result of a
heart condition from which he had suffered for many years.
References
- Horenstein, A L; Ferrero E,
Funaro A, Crivellin F, Said M (.). "César Milstein, scientist
(1927-2002)". J. Biol. Regul. Homeost. Agents
16 (1): 91–2. PMID 12425336.
- Springer, Timothy A (June 2002).
"César Milstein, the father of modern immunology". Nat. Immunol. 3 (6):
501–3. doi:10.1038/ni0602-501. PMID 12032559.
- Springer, Timothy A (May. 2002).
"Immunology. Retrospective: César Milstein (1927-2002)". Science 296
(5571): 1253. doi:10.1126/science.1073325. PMID 12016298.
- Neuberger, Michael (April 2002).
"César Milstein (1927-2002)". Curr. Biol.
12 (9): R308–10. doi:10.1016/S0960-9822(02)00823-0. PMID 12007427.
- Rajewsky, Klaus (April 2002).
"Obituary: César Milstein (1927-2002)". Nature
416 (6883): 806. doi:10.1038/416806a. PMID 11976669.
- Raju, T N (January 2000). "The
Nobel chronicles. 1984: Niels Kai Jerne, (1911-94); César Milstein
(b 1926); and Georges Jean Franz Köhler (1946-95)". Lancet
355 (9197): 75. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(05)72025-0. PMID 10615922.
- Bolhuis, R L; Haaijman J J
(December 1984). "[Nobel Prizes for immunology 1984 (Niels K.
Jerne, Cesar Milstein, George Köhler)]". Nederlands tijdschrift
voor geneeskunde
100: 2433–5. PMID 6395024.
- Kaartinen, M (. 1984). "[The
1984 Nobel Prize in medicine (Cesar Milstein, George Köhler, Niels
Jerne)]". Duodecim; lääketieteellinen aikakauskirja
100 (23-24): 1573–8. PMID 6394268.
- Onneby, M (. 1984). "[Immunology
in theory and practice. Nils K Jerne shares the Nobel prize in
medicine with Georges JF Köhler and Cesar Milstein]". Nordisk
medicin 99 (11): 300, 304. PMID 6393048.
External
links