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"Chemist & Nobel Prize Winner"
Elion
received an M.S. degree from New York University and began her long tenure
(1944-1983) at the Burroughs Wellcome pharmaceutical company at the height
of World War II (1939-1945).
Before the 1940s few women
worked as scientific researchers, but the war afforded more opportunities
for women as men were called to the battlefront. At Burroughs Wellcome,
Elion teamed up with American chemist George Herbert Hitchings. Together,
they developed many drugs that have been proven effective against
previously untreatable diseases. Elion and Hitchings shared the 1988 Nobel
Prize in physiology or medicine with British pharmacologist Sir James
Whyte Black.
Elion and Hitchings compared the functioning of normal human
cells with that of bacteria, viruses, and cancer cells in order to find
ways to inhibit or kill harmful invading cells without damaging healthy
body cells. Elion and Hitchings concentrated on how cells synthesize the
building blocks of
Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA) called nucleotides. They successfully blocked the manufacture of new DNA in
harmful cells; this stopped the cells from multiplying.
The researchers
accomplished this feat by developing chemical compounds that would fill in
for key nucleotides. Because different sequences of nucleotides are
manufactured by different cells, Elion and Hitchings were able to
fabricate compounds that would attack the DNA only of the dangerous
cells.
Over nearly four decades of research, Elion and Hitchings developed drugs for
the treatment of many diseases and conditions, including cancer, malaria,
leukemia, herpes, gout, heart disease, autoimmune diseases, bacterial
infections, and transplant rejections. Their techniques are now
standard in the pharmaceutical industry, but were revolutionary in the
1940s when they were first developed.
After her retirement in 1983, Elion taught, held various advisory
positions, and continued consulting for the Burroughs Wellcome Company.
In 1991 President Bush presented Elion with the National Medal of Science.
Her Words of
Devotion:
"When you meet someone who has lived for 25 years with a kidney
graft, there's your reward."
Acheivements: Nobel Prize in
Medicine(1988) National Medal of Science
First Woman inducted to the Inventors Hall of Fame (1991)
National Women's Hall of Fame Engineering and Science Hall of
Fame
Links: National
Cancer Institute Womens Inventor
Museum
Contributed by:
Sol (C)




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