Rebecca Lancefield

Rebecca Craighill Lancefield
Rebecca Lancefield (center) receiving the T. Duckett Jones Award in 1960.
Born January 5, 1895
Died March 3, 1981
Nationality American
Alma mater Wellesley College (B.A.)
Columbia University (M.S. & Ph.D.)
Known for Lancefield grouping
Spouse(s) Donald Lancefield
Children Jane Hershey
Awards T. Duckett Jones Award
Medal of the New York Academy of Medicine
Scientific career
Fields Bacteriology
Immunology
Institutions Rockefeller University
Columbia University
Doctoral advisor Hans Zinsser
Other academic advisors Oswald Avery

Rebecca Craighill Lancefield (January 5, 1895 – March 3, 1981)[1] was a prominent American microbiologist. She joined the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research (now Rockefeller University) in New York in 1918, and was associated with that institute throughout her long and outstanding career. Her bibliography comprises more than 50 publications published over 60 years.

Lancefield is best known for her serological classification of ß-hemolytic streptococcal bacteria,[2] Lancefield grouping, which is based on the carbohydrate composition of bacterial antigens found on their cell walls.[3] She is also responsible for the serological typing of Group A Streptococci.

Early life and education

Lancefield was born at Fort Wadsworth, Staten Island, New York. Her father was an officer in the US Army Engineer Corps.[1] She attended Wellesley College in Massachusetts. After graduating in 1916 with a degree in zoology, she taught at a girls school in Vermont for one year.[4] Lancefield received her master's degree from Columbia in 1918. The same year, she married Donald E. Lancefield, a fellow graduate student in genetics at Columbia. After graduation, she worked as a technician for Oswald Avery and Alphonse Dochez at Rockefeller. The following year, she returned to Columbia to study on Drosophila willistoni under Charles W. Metz.[5] In 1922, Lancefield began her Ph.D. studies. She received her Ph.D. in immunology and bacteriology in 1925 from Columbia, although most of her graduate work was carried out at Rockefeller.

Career and Research

Lancefield's first co-authored paper was published in 1919 when she was a technician, an unusual recognition at the time. Previous to this work, researchers did not know if different streptococcal strains were biologically distinct. Working with Avery and Dochez, she identified four serological types that classified 70 percent of the ß-hemolytic streptococcal strains they were studying.[2]

For her Ph.D. thesis, Lancefield studied viridans streptococci. Lancefield originally joined the lab of Hans Zinsser. Zissner did not want to work with women, and suggested she move her work to the lab of Homer Swift.[4] Therefore, the majority of her work was carried out at Rockefeller, where Swift's lab was located. At the time, viridans streptococci were incorrectly believed to contribute to rheumatic fever. Lancefield's thesis work helped dispel this idea.[1]

After her Ph.D., Lancefield returned to studying ß-hemolytic streptococci at Rockefeller. She now aimed to identify the biological components of surface antigens located on the bacteria. In 1928, Lancefield reported that the type-specific antigen of streptococci was a protein. She named this protein the M-protein because a matt colony occurs when the bacteria is exposed to the antigen.[6] Lancefield discovered that the group-specific antigen of streptococci was composed of carbohydrates, which she named the C-carbohydrate. Within this discovery, Lancefield revealed that the C-carbohydrate was not species-specific, as originally thought.[6] This realization prompted her development of a classification system, called Lancefield grouping, for streptococcal diseases. She initially designated group A for human streptococcal infections and group B for bovine streptococcal infections. Today, Lancefield groups includes groups A through M.[6]

Lancefield discovered two additional group A streptococci surface proteins: the T-antigen, in 1940, and the R-antigen, in 1957. Later in her career, she focused on group B streptococci. Her research revealed that group B streptococci lacked the M-protein. She discovered that, instead, surface polysaccharides were responsible for their virulence factor.[6]

During World War II, Lancefield served on the Commission on Streptococcal and Staphylococcal Diseases of the Armed Forces Epidemiological Board.[6]

In 1946, Lancefield was promoted to associate member at Rockefeller University. She was promoted to full member and professor at Rockefeller in 1958.[6] The same year, she became a professor of microbiology at Columbia University. Lancefield retired from both positions in 1965, though she continued to work in her laboratory as a professor emeritus until 1980.

Lancefield was a long-time collaborator of Macyln McCarty and a mentor of Emil Gotschlich, two recipients of the notable Lasker Prize.[6]

Honors

In 1943, she was the second woman to become president of the Society of American Bacteriologists. In 1961, she became president of the American Association of Immunologists, the first woman to hold the position. She was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1970. In 1973, she was awarded an honorary Doctor of Science by Rockefeller University. She was formally honored by Wellesley College, her alma mater, in 1976. Lancefield received many awards, including the T. Duckett Jones Award of the Helen Hay Whitney Foundation, the American Heart Association Achievement Award, and the Medal of the New York Academy of Medicine.[1]

Death and legacy

On Thanksgiving Day in 1980, Lancefield broke her hip and was not able to fully regain her mobility. She died the following year at the age of 86.

Dr. Lancefield's recipe for eggnog has been used by her fellow scientists for decades and was published on Science Friday[7] in 2008.

Due to Lancefield's willingness to answer microbiological questions, her lab at Rockefeller earned the nickname “the Scotland Yard of streptococcal mysteries."[6]

The Lancefield International Symposium on Streptococci and Streptococcal Diseases is named in her honor.[4] The samples collected over her career are now maintained by Rockefeller University as the Lancefield collection. To date, the collection includes over 6,000 streptococci strains.[8]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Maclyn McCarty. "Rebecca Craighill Lancefield 18951981" (PDF). Biographical Memoirs. Washington, D.C.: National Academy of Sciences. pp. 225&mdash, 246. . p.227
  2. 1 2 Lancefield RC (1933). "A serological differentiation of human and other groups of hemolytic streptococci". J Exp Med. 57 (4): 571–95. doi:10.1084/jem.57.4.571. PMC 2132252. PMID 19870148.
  3. Patterson MJ (1996). Baron S; et al., eds. Streptococcus. in: Baron's Medical Microbiology (4th ed.). Univ of Texas Medical Branch. ISBN 0-9631172-1-1.
  4. 1 2 3 O'Hern, Elizabeth (1975). "Rebecca Craighill Lancefield, Pioneer Microbiologist" (PDF). ASM News. 4: 805–810.
  5. Lancefield, Rebecca C.; Metz, Charles W. (1921-08-01). "Non-Disjunction and the Chromosome Relationships of Drosophila willistoni". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 7 (8): 225–229. doi:10.1073/pnas.7.8.225. ISSN 0027-8424. PMID 16576594.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "PI in the Scotland Yard of Streptococcal Mysteries" (PDF). THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF IMMUNOLOGISTS.
  7. "Dr. Rebecca Lancefield's Eggnog Recipe" Science Friday.
  8. "The Rockefeller University » The Lancefield Collection of Streptococcus Strains". lab.rockefeller.edu. Retrieved 2018-08-02.
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