[HTML][HTML] The yellow fever vaccine: a history

JG Frierson - The Yale journal of biology and medicine, 2010 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
JG Frierson
The Yale journal of biology and medicine, 2010ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
After failed attempts at producing bacteria-based vaccines, the discovery of a viral agent
causing yellow fever and its isolation in monkeys opened new avenues of research.
Subsequent advances were the attenuation of the virus in mice and later in tissue culture;
the creation of the seed lot system to avoid spontaneous mutations; the ability to produce the
vaccine on a large scale in eggs; and the removal of dangerous contaminants. An important
person in the story is Max Theiler, who was Professor of Epidemiology and Public Health at …
Abstract
After failed attempts at producing bacteria-based vaccines, the discovery of a viral agent causing yellow fever and its isolation in monkeys opened new avenues of research. Subsequent advances were the attenuation of the virus in mice and later in tissue culture; the creation of the seed lot system to avoid spontaneous mutations; the ability to produce the vaccine on a large scale in eggs; and the removal of dangerous contaminants. An important person in the story is Max Theiler, who was Professor of Epidemiology and Public Health at Yale from 1964-67, and whose work on virus attenuation created the modern vaccine and earned him the Nobel Prize.
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov