Вы находитесь на странице: 1из 1

BOOKS & ARTS COMMENT

ME DI CAL RESEARCH

The vaccine chronicles


Ewen Callaway extols a study on the creation of a cell line key to combating rubella.

A
rare probity permeates Meredith Henrietta Lacks in gauge whether fetal cells might be predis-
Wadman’s The Vaccine Race, the 1951 and gave rise posed to turn into tumours. In 1962, lung
riveting story of a human fetal cell to her immortal tissue from Mrs X’s aborted fetus reached
line, the scientists who established it and the HeLa cells. In search Hayflick; he created hundreds of ampoules of
front lines of vaccine research where it was of normal human WI-38 cells and froze them in liquid nitrogen.
deployed. In the epilogue, Wadman tracks cells unlikely to be The resulting Wistar polio vaccine found use
down ‘Mrs X’, the Swedish woman whose infected with viruses, in Europe. But the cells’ biggest success was in
aborted fetus gave rise to the cell line without Hayflick turned to heading off rubella. In the 1940s, it had been
her knowledge. Wadman promised never to fetuses. (Abortion found that pregnant women who got rubella
make her name public or to contact her again. was then illegal across The Vaccine Race: often gave birth to blind infants; doctors later
The book — the first from Wadman, a the United States, but Science, Politics, tied the infection to deafness, heart defects
former Nature journalist — invites com- some hospitals occa- and the Human and fatal brain inflammation. There were US
parison with Rebecca Skloot’s 2007 The sionally performed Costs of Defeating epidemics every 6–9 years, and one was on
Disease
Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks (Crown). ‘therapeutic abor- MEREDITH WADMAN the horizon when Wistar researchers started
Skloot also explored the social, ethical and tions’ from which Viking: 2017. work on a vaccine in the 1960s.
historical legacies of research on human sub- the human fetal cells Here, Wadman turns her attention to
jects and their discarded tissues. Her book came.) Hayflick coaxed different bits of fetal vaccinologist Stanley Plotkin. She is at her
drew much of its power from chronicling the tissue — cells from muscles, kidneys, hearts best in these passages, soberly describing
author’s relationship with, and advocacy on and lungs — to divide in laboratory dishes. ethically dubious clinical trials in orphans,
behalf of, Lacks’ family. Wadman stands back Unlike cancer cell lines such as HeLa, which intellectually disabled children and other
from sources and material to guide readers has unstable chromosomes, these cells con- vulnerable populations. Plotkin’s rubella
through a narrative that is no less captivating. tained the normal number of chromosomes vaccine was not the first choice of the US
The cell line at the centre of The Vaccine even after months of dividing in culture. Even- government, in large part because of con-
Race, WI-38, was established in the 1960s by tually, however, the cell lines began dying off. cerns about using a vaccine made from
Leonard Hayflick, a driven cell culturist at Hayflick theorized that healthy cells could human cells. But it soon became clear that
the independent Wistar Institute in Philadel- undergo only a limited number of cell divi- competing vaccines made with animal cells
phia, Pennsylvania. The institute was becom- sions. That sparked the field of cellular age- caused worrying side effects and did not
ing a global hub in the war against polio and ing. (Jack Szostak, Elizabeth Blackburn and lead to long-lasting immunity. In 1978, the
other viruses under its larger-than-life direc- Carol Greider, who determined aspects of United States licensed Plotkin’s vaccine.
tor Hilary Koprowski. Although Koprowski its biological basis in DNA caps called telo­ Hayflick rejoins the narrative in the final
saw cell culturists as “supporting actors” to meres, won the 2009 medicine Nobel.) section. Wadman’s reporting chops shine
JAMES CAVALLINI/SPL

the institute’s star virologists, Hayflick’s lab Koprowski soon got other ideas for the when she describes the acrimonious and
work soon caught his attention. fetal cell lines. Hayflick showed that the career-crippling legal dispute that emerged
In the late 1950s, all available lab cultures cells could be infected with human viruses, between Hayflick and the US government
of human cells were derived from tumours including polio. That made them an ideal over the ownership and resale of WI-38 cells
such as the cervical cancer that killed tool for studying infections and producing after he moved to Stanford University, Cali-
vaccines — killed or weakened viruses that fornia, in 1968. That clash led him to resign
summon an immune response against a in 1976, and to withdraw from considera-
pathogen. The first successful polio vaccine, tion for a job directing the newly established
developed by Jonas Salk in 1952 (T. Tansey US National Institute on Aging in Bethesda,
Nature 520, 620–621; 2015), had been made Maryland. Wadman’s retelling does not com-
by infecting monkey kidney cells with polio, pletely exonerate him. But in 1980, not long
then killing the virus. However, incompletely after the dispute spilled into the news, the
killed batches of polio vaccine paralysed hun- US government passed the Bayh–Dole Act,
dreds of people. Many scientists, including making it possible for federally funded life
Koprowski, were pursuing a less dangerous, scientists to pursue commercial applications
more effective polio vaccine composed of for their research, in many cases with finan-
virus weakened after being passed repeatedly cial rewards for them and their universities.
through monkey cells. But the discovery that WI-38 cells are still used to make vaccines
monkey cells can carry hard-to-detect viruses for rubella and other illnesses. Last year,
prompted Koprowski to champion Hayflick’s Wadman filed a freedom of information
human fetal cell lines as vaccine factories. request to find out how many of them
WI-38 emerged from a collaboration remain in the non-profit tissue repository
between Hayflick and Swedish physician- that holds Hayflick’s remaining stocks. Reas-
scientist Sven Gard. Abortion was legal but suringly, there are still plenty to go around. ■
restricted in Sweden, and doctors
Rubivirus, which were willing to provide patient Ewen Callaway is a senior reporter for
causes rubella. medical histories to let regulators Nature in London.

9 F E B R UA RY 2 0 1 7 | VO L 5 4 2 | N AT U R E | 1 6 3
©
2
0
1
7
M
a
c
m
i
l
l
a
n
P
u
b
l
i
s
h
e
r
s
L
i
m
i
t
e
d
,
p
a
r
t
o
f
S
p
r
i
n
g
e
r
N
a
t
u
r
e
.
A
l
l
r
i
g
h
t
s
r
e
s
e
r
v
e
d
.

Вам также может понравиться