Frederick Twort

From Citizendium
Revision as of 19:50, 21 June 2007 by imported>John J. Dennehy
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Frederick William Twort (1877-1950) was an English bacteriologist who discovered in bacteriophages,the viruses that attack and destroy bacteria.

Frederick Twort

Early Life and Scientific Training

The eldest of the eleven children Dr. William Henry Twort, Twort was born in Camberley, Surrey on 22 October 1877. Little is known of his youth, except that he studied medicine at St Thomas's Hospital, London. After qualifing in medicine (Membership of the Royal College of Surgeons, Licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians) in 1900, Twort took the first paid post available, assistant to Dr. Louis Jenner, Superintendent of the Clinical Laboratory of St Thomas' Hospital. There he trained in pathological techniques. In 1902 he became assistant to the Bacteriologist of the London Hospital, Dr. William Bulloch, later F.R.S., and carried out single-handed the whole diagnostic routine of the Hospital. In 1909, Twort became the superintendent of the Brown Institute, a pathology research centre, and remained there for the duration of his career.


Twort also researched Johne's disease, a chronic intestinal infection of cattle, and discovered thatvitamin K is needed by growing leprosy bacteria.

Twort had one scientific idea which he pursued all of his life. His theory was that pathogenic bacteria required an "Essential Substance" for their growth and vitality. In 1914, Twort set out to identify the elusive "Essential Substance" that would allow vaccinia virus to grow in vitro. At the time, smallpox vaccines had to be made in the skin of calves and was almost always contaminated with the bacteria Staphylococcus. Twort speculated that the contaminating bacteria might be the source of the "essential substance" needed by vaccinia to survive. He plated some of the smallpox vaccines on nutrient agar slants and obtained large bacterial colonies of several colours. Upon closer examination of the colonies with a magnifying glass, he found minute glassy areas that would not grow when subcultured. He quickly realized that these glassy areas were the result of the destruction of the bacterial cells and was able to pick from some of these areas and transmit this from one staph colony to another.

He published these results in the Lancet in 1915 and called the contagion the Bacteriolytic Agent. Further experiments showed that the agent could pass through porcelain filters and that it required bacteria for growth. He toyed with the idea that the Bactriolytic Agent was vaccinia that invaded the bacteria in search of the "Essential Substance".

Twort and others wanted to use these bacteriolytic agents to cure bacterial diseases in humans and animals. When this proved to be unsuccessful, Twort went back to expanding his original idea that the bacteriolytic agents themselves needed an addition (essential) factor of a more exceptional nature to satisfy their fundamental needs. He searched for a substance that would allow viruses to grow apart from other forms of life (i.e. a host organism) and when this was unsuccessful, he tried to prove that bacteria evolved from viruses. Financial support for his research dwindled and his laboratory was destroyed by a bomb in 1944. The University of London took this opportunity to deprive Twort of his post and research facilities. He retired to live in at Camberly and by 1949 his work was largely forgotten and the term Bacteriolytic Agent had been replaced in favour of the term Bacteiophage.

References

Twort, F.W. 1915. An investigation on the nature of ultra-microscopic viruses. Lancet 189: 1241–1243

Fildes, P. 1951. Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society. 7:504-517.