| Literature DB >> 31572361 |
Jean-Marc Cavaillon1, Philippe Sansonetti1,2, Michel Goldman3.
Abstract
The 100th Anniversary of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1919 awarded to Jules Bordet offers the opportunity to underline the contributions of this Belgian doctor to the blooming of immunology at the end of the nineteenth century at the Institut Pasteur de Paris. It is also the occasion to emphasize his achievements as director of the Institut Pasteur du Brabant and professor at the Université libre de Bruxelles. Both in France and Belgium, he developed a holistic vision of immunology as a science at the crossroads of chemistry, physiology, and microbiology.Entities:
Keywords: Bordetella pertussis (whooping cough); Metchnikoff; alexin; anaphylatoxin; bacteriolysis; cattle pague; complement; serotherapy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31572361 PMCID: PMC6749103 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.02114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Jules Bordet in Elie Metchnikoff's laboratory.
Figure 2Group photo of the 1895 Technical Microbie Course of Institut Pasteur. First on the left, third raw: J. Bordet; Fifth and sixth from the left, first raw, seated: E. Metchnikoff and E. Roux. J. Danysz is standing just in front of J. Bordet.