Amédée Borrel

Amédée Borrel

Amédée Borrel's birthplace in Cazouls-lès-Béziers
Born 1867
Cazouls-lès-Béziers, Hérault
Died 15 September 1936
Fields virology
Alma mater University of Montpellier
Known for viral theory of cancer

Amédée Borrel (1867 15 September 1936) was a French biologist born in Cazouls-lès-Béziers, Hérault.

He studied natural sciences at the University of Montpellier, where he earned his degree in 1890. From 1892 to 1895, Borrel worked in the laboratory of Ilya Ilyich Metchnikoff (1845–1916) at the Pasteur Institute in Paris. Here he performed research of tuberculosis, and with Alexandre Yersin (1863–1943) and Léon Charles Albert Calmette (1863–1933), he worked on a vaccine against bubonic plague. With Yersin and Calmette, he co-published the treatise Le microbe de la peste à bubons concerning the plague bacillus. He is also credited for pioneer investigations on the viral theory of cancer.[1]

From 1896 to 1914 he served as laboratory chief of the microbiology course at the Pasteur Institute. In 1919 he attained the chair of bacteriology at the University of Strasbourg.

A genus of bacteria called Borrelia is named after Amédée Borrel, as are "Borrel bodies", which are tiny virus-containing granules that cluster to form "Bollinger bodies", which in turn are found in tissue cells of fowlpox. Bollinger bodies are named after German pathologist Otto Bollinger (1843–1909).

In 1900 he became a member of the Société de biologie. During World War I, Borrel developed one of the earliest known gas masks.

References

  1. Le Guyon, R (November 1967). "Borrel and the virus theory of cancer". Bull. Acad. Natl. Med. (FRANCE) 151 (29): 585–93. ISSN 0001-4079. PMID 4912648.

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