| Literature DB >> 35454184 |
Jean-Marc Cavaillon1, Sandra Legout2.
Abstract
Louis Pasteur is the most internationally known French scientist. He discovered molecular chirality, and he contributed to the understanding of the process of fermentation, helping brewers and winemakers to improve their beverages. He proposed a process, known as pasteurization, for the sterilization of wines. He established the germ theory of infectious diseases that allowed Joseph Lister to develop his antiseptic practice in surgery. He solved the problem of silkworm disease, although he had refuted the idea of Antoine Béchamp, who first considered it was a microbial infection. He created four vaccines (fowl cholera, anthrax, pig erysipelas, and rabies) in the paths of his precursors, Henri Toussaint (anthrax vaccine) and Pierre Victor Galtier (rabies vaccine). He generalized the word "vaccination" coined by Richard Dunning, Edward Jenner's friend. Robert Koch, his most famous opponent, pointed out the great ambiguity of Pasteur's approach to preparing his vaccines. Analysis of his laboratory notebooks has allowed historians to discern the differences between the legend built by his hagiographers and reality. In this review, we revisit his career, his undeniable achievements, and tell the truth about a hero who made every effort to build his own fame.Entities:
Keywords: antibiosis; infectious diseases; puerperal fever; spontaneous generation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35454184 PMCID: PMC9027159 DOI: 10.3390/biom12040596
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Main contributions of Louis Pasteur.
| 1848–1858 | Studies on molecular chirality: crystallography of tartaric and paratartaric acid |
| 1857–1879 | Studies on fermentation; First patent on alcoholic fermentation (1857) |
| 1861 | Discovery of anaerobic bacteria |
| 1861–1879 | Refutation of the theory of spontaneous generations. Discovery of germs |
| 1863–1873 | Studies on diseases of wine, vinegar, and beer |
| 1865 | Pasteurization of wine; Patent on wine preservation |
| 1865–1870 | Study on the diseases of silkworms |
| 1871 | Patent on beer preparation and preservation |
| 1877 | First observation of antibiosis |
| 1877–1881 | Studies on infectious diseases (anthrax, puerperal sepsis, boils) |
| 1878 | Demonstration in a vineyard that isolation of grapes from environmental air prevents fermentation in the further wine-making process |
| 1880 | Co-discovery with Alexander Ogston (UK) of |
| 1881 | Co-discovery with George M. Sternberg (USA) of |
| 1880–1885 | Preparation of vaccines (fowl cholera, anthrax, pig erysipelas, rabies) |
| 1887 | First bacteriological war: elimination of rabbits by |
Figure 1Left: Pasteur in the French Press seen as a lay saint (Le Courrier Français, 4 April 1886); center: as an angel fighting rabies (Le Don Quichotte, 13 March 1886); right: as a revered icon after his death (Le Petit Journal, 13 October 1895). (© Institut Pasteur, Musée Pasteur).
Main steps of Louis Pasteur’s life and career.
| 27 December 1822 | Birth in Dôle (Jura) (third child of Jean-Joseph Pasteur (1791–1865) and Jeanne-Étiennette Roqui (1793–1848) |
| 1827 | The family moved to Arbois |
| 1831–1843 | Studied in Arbois, Besançon, Dijon, and Paris |
| 1844–1847 | Studied at Ecole Normale Supérieure (ENS, Paris) |
| 1846 | “Agrégé préparateur” at ENS |
| 1847 | Thesis for his Doctorat ès-Sciences (physics and chemistry) |
| 1848–1853 | Taught physics in high school in Dijon and chemistry at the University of Strasbourg |
| 29 May 1849 | Married Marie Laurent, daughter of the Strasbourg university’s rector |
| 1850 | Birth of Jeanne, first child (deceased in 1859, 9 ½ years) |
| 1851 | Birth of Jean-Baptiste, second child (deceased in 1908) |
| 1853 | Birth of Cécile, third child (deceased in 1866, 12 ½ years) |
| Knight of the Légion d’Honneur | |
| 1854 | Professor of chemistry and dean of the faculty of sciences of Lille |
| 1857 | Failure of his application to the Academy of Sciences |
| 1857–1867 | Administrator and director of scientific studies at ENS |
| 1858 | Birth of Marie-Louise, fourth child (deceased in 1934) |
| Set up his research laboratory in the attics of ENS | |
| 1862 | Election at the French Academy of Sciences |
| 1863 | Birth of Camille, fifth child (deceased in 1865, 2 years) |
| Professor of geology, physics, and applied chemistry at the School of Fine Arts | |
| 1867–1888 | Director of a laboratory at ENS |
| 1867–1872 | Professor, chair of organic chemistry at the Sorbonne |
| 1868 | First severe brain stroke that paralyzed his left side |
| 1873 | Election at the French Academy of Medicine |
| 1875 | Failure to be elected Senator for Jura |
| 1879 | His daughter Marie-Louise married René Valéry-Radot (1853–1933) |
| 1881 | Election at the French Academy; Great Cross of the Légion d’honneur |
| 1888–1895 | Director of Institut Pasteur |
| 28 September 1895 | Death in Institut Pasteur annex (Marnes la Coquette) |
| 26 December 1896 | The coffin of Louis Pasteur was transferred in the crypt of Institut Pasteur |
Figure 2The main predecessors recognized by Louis Pasteur (Spallanzani, Davaine, and Schwann) and his main supporters (Tyndall and Lister) (© Institut Pasteur, Musée Pasteur; © Wikipedia; © Collection of Pauls Stradiņš, Museum of History of Medicine, Riga, Latvia).
Figure 3Louis Pasteur faced numerous precursors, opponents, and competitors. Some were wrong, but a few, particularly Hameau, Béchamp, Toussaint, Galtier, and Duboué, were right despite being unknown or poorly recognized by Louis Pasteur (© Wikipedia/© https://gw.geneanet.org accessed on 19 March 2022).
Some of the precursors who, before Louis Pasteur, proposed the germ theory and/or refuted the concept of spontaneous generation.
| Before JC | Marcus Terentius Varro (Varron) (116 BC–27 BC) (Roman) |
| 1st century | Galen of Pergamon (129–216) (Greece) |
| 1546 | Girolamo Fracastoro (1483–1553) (Italy) |
| 1658 | Athanasius Kircher (1601 or 1602–1680) (Germany) |
| 1663 | Robert Boyle (1627–1691) (Ireland) |
| 1668 | Francesco Redi (1626–1697) (Italy) |
| 1714 | Nicolas Andry de Bois-Regard (1658–1742) (France) |
| 1718 | Louis Joblot (1645–1723) (France) |
| 1720 | Benjamin Marten (1690–1752) (UK) |
| 1721 | Jean-Baptiste Goiffon (1658–1730) (France) |
| 1762 | Marcus Antonius von Plenčič (1705–1786) (Austria) |
| 1765 | Lazzaro Spallanzani (1729–1799) (Italy) |
| 1836 | Theodor Schwann (1810–1882) (Germany) |
| 1836 | Franz Schulze (1815–1921) (Germany) |
| 1837 | Jean Hameau (1779–1851) (France) |
| 1839 | Sir Henry Holland (1788–1873) (UK) |
| 1840 | Jakob Henle (1809–1885) (Germany) |
| 1844 | Agostino Bassi (1773–1856) (Italy) |
| 1846 | Gideon Algernon Mantell (1790–1852) (UK) |
| 1866 | Auguste Chauveau (1827–1917) (France) |
Figure 4On 27 December 1892, for his 70th birthday, the international scientific community celebrated Pasteur’s “jubilé”. The reception took place in the great amphitheater of “la Sorbonne”. On the picture, one sees the president of France, Sadi Carnot, helping Pasteur to walk and Lister climbing a few steps to congratulate Pasteur. Oil on canvas by Jean-André Rixens (1902). © Institut Pasteur/Musée Pasteur.