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Leo Sachs

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Leo Sachs (ליאו זקס)
Leo Sachs, 1955
Born(1924-10-14)14 October 1924
Leipzig,Saxony
Died12 December 2013(2013-12-12)(aged 89)
NationalityIsraeli
EducationUniversity of Wales, Bangor(BSc),Cambridge University(PhD 1951)
Known forDiscovery of interleukins
AwardsEuropean Molecular Biology Organisation(EMBO),Israel Prize,Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities,Wolf Prize in Medicine,and numerous others
Scientific career
FieldsMolecular biology
InstitutionsWeizmann Institute of Science

Leo Sachs(Hebrew:ליאו זקס; ‎ 14 October 1924 – 12 December 2013) was a German-born Israeli molecular biologist and cancer researcher.[1]Born inLeipzig,[2]he emigrated to theUnited Kingdomin 1933, and to Israel in 1952. There he joined theWeizmann Institute of Science.

Biography[edit]

Leo Sachs moved to Britain with his family in 1933 following Hitler's rise to power. In 1952 he received a BSc from theUniversity of Wales in Bangor.His original dream was to help establish a kibbutz in Palestine, and he even spent two years as a farm laborer, milking cows. But the doors to Palestine were virtually closed by the British, so Sachs began studying agricultural botany at the University of Wales, became fascinated along the way by genetics and development, and ended up completing a PhD in genetics in 1951 at Cambridge University.

Uponmoving to Israel,he began to contribute to the fledgling country in the way he knew best – as a geneticist at the Weizmann Institute. Because there were no animal studies yet at the Institute, Sachs started working on a theory that human amniotic fluid, which bathes the baby in the womb, contains fetal cells that provide information about the fetus. His research proved him right, showing that these cells can be used to determine the baby's gender and other important genetic properties. Sachs's research formed the basis for amniocentesis, the widely used prenatal diagnosis of human diseases.

Eventually, Sachs secured his own laboratory and a supply of mice and began working on a question that would anchor his research throughout: What controls normal development and what happens when development goes wrong? Why does the machinery in cancer cells run amok, causing abnormal proliferation? Focusing on blood stem cells, a small group of bone marrow cells that produce some 200 billion new blood cells every day, Sachs ended up, in 1963, designing the first cell culture system able to grow, clone, and induce the development of different types of normal blood cells. Using this process, he subsequently discovered and identified a family of proteins that plays a key role in controlling normal blood cell development. Later named colony stimulating factors (CSF) and interleukins, one of these CSF proteins is now used worldwide in a variety of clinical procedures, including boosting the production of infection-fighting white blood cells in cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy or radiation, and improving the success of bone marrow and peripheral blood cell transplants.

Sachs also demonstrated, for the first time, that malignancy can be reversed. He showed that the proteins he had identified, along with some other compounds, set leukemic cells back on the right track – inducing them to differentiate into normal-behaving mature cells. This approach, using retinoic acid combined with chemotherapy, is now standard procedure in treating human promyelocytic leukemia, and it has greatly increased survival rates.

At the Weizmann Institute, he established a section on genetics and virology and for 27 years, from 1962 to 1989, served as head of the institute's genetics department. In addition, between 1974 and 1979 he served as dean of Weizmann's biology faculty.

Awards and honours[edit]

  • In 1965, he was elected Member of theEuropean Molecular Biology Organisation;
  • In 1972, Sachs was awarded theIsrael Prize,for natural sciences[3]
  • In 1975 he was elected Member,Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities;
  • In 1977 Sachs was awarded the Rothschild Prize in the Biological Sciences;
  • In 1980, he was awarded theWolf Prize in Medicine,[4]becoming the first Israeli scientist to win theWolf Prize;for his "contributions to knowledge of the function and dysfunction of the body cells through [his] studies on... the elucidation of mechanisms governing the control and differentiation of normal and cancer cells".
  • In 1983 Sachs was awarded theBristol-Myers Squibb Awardfor Distinguished Achievement in Cancer Research, New York;
  • In 1985 he was elected Doctor Honoris Causa, Bordeaux University, France;
  • In 1986 Sachs was awarded The Royal SocietyWellcome FoundationPrize, London;
  • In 1989 Sachs was awarded theAlfred P. Sloan Prize,General Motors Cancer Research Foundation, New York;
  • In 1995, he was also elected as a Foreign Associate to the U.S.National Academy of Sciences(NAS).
  • In 1996, Sachs received the Ot Hanagid (Medal of the Governor) award, presented annually by Jerusalem's Shaare Zedek Medical Center, for his pioneering work in cancer research. The presentation noted that "He discovered and identified a group ofproteinsamong themcolony-stimulating factorsand someinterleukinsthat control the viability and growth of bloodstem cellsand their development into different types of mature blood cells. "It noted further that his" research in the 1950s on the use ofamniotic fluidto diagnose a fetus s genetic properties has formed the basis for today'sprenatal diagnosisof human diseases. "[5]
  • In 1997 he was elected aFellow of the Royal Society[6][7]
  • In 1998, he was elected Foreign Member,Academia Europaea;
  • In 1999, he was elected Member Honorary Fellow, University of Wales, Bangor;
  • In 2000, he was elected Ham-Wasserman Lecture, American Society of Hematology, San Francisco;
  • In 2001, he was awarded Honorary Life Membership Award, International Cytokine Society;
  • In 2002, he was awarded Emet Prize for Life Sciences, Medicine and Genetics

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^Efrati, Ido (15 December 2013)."Prof. Leo Sachs, one of Israel's first geneticists, dies at 89 – National Israel News".Haaretz.Retrieved15 December2013.
  2. ^"Who's who in the State of Israel".1958.Retrieved15 December2013.
  3. ^"Israel Prize Official Site – Recipients in 1972 (in Hebrew)".
  4. ^Wolf Prize Recipients in MedicineArchived26 February 2009 at theWayback Machine
  5. ^"Shaare Zedek Honors Weizmann Institute's Prof. Leo Sachs".Archived fromthe originalon 8 November 2005.
  6. ^"Fellows".Royal Society.Retrieved18 October2010.
  7. ^Groner, Yoram; Sachs, Pnina; Lotem, Joseph (2019)."Leo Sachs. 14 October 1924—12 December 2013".Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society.66:355–375.doi:10.1098/rsbm.2018.0027.S2CID86855775.

External links[edit]