William
Campbell
Irish-born
American parasitology’s
Written
by Kara Rogers
Editors
by Enciclpedia Britannica
Quick
FactsFacts
Born:
June 28, 1930, Ramelton, Ireland (age 94)
Awards
And Honors: Nobel Prize (2015)
Subjects
Of Study: nematode anthelmintic heartworm disease parasitism trichinosis
William Campbell (born June 28, 1930, Ramelton, Ireland) is an Irish-born American parasitologist known for his contribution to the discovery of the anthelmintic compounds avermectin and ivermectin, which proved vital to the control of certain parasitic infections in humans and other animals. For his discoveries, Campbell was awarded the 2015 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine (shared with Japanese microbiologist Ōmura Satoshi
and Chinese
scientist Tu Youyou).
Campbell
earned a bachelor’s degree in zoology from Trinity College in Dublin in 1952.
He subsequently went to the United States, where he studied veterinary science,
zoology, and pathology at the University of Wisconsin. In 1957, after
completing a Ph.D. at Wisconsin, Campbell took a position as a research
assistant at the Merck Institute for Therapeutic Research in New Jersey. There
in 1976 he was made the director of basic parasitology, and from 1984 to 1990
he served as a senior scientist and directed assay research and development.
Campbell became a U.S. citizen in 1962.
In the 1970s,
researchers at Merck & Co. received a culture of the soil bacterium
Streptomyces avermitilis from Ōmura Satoshi, who had discovered the species in
the course of his work at the Kitasato Institute in Japan. Preliminary
experiments suggested that the organism produced a substance that was
potentially lethal to certain types of parasites. In 1975, using an assay that
tested compounds for activity against the infectious nematode Nematospiroides
dubius in mice, Campbell and colleagues at Merck discovered avermectin, which
existed as several compounds, all closely related in structure and known as
macrocyclic lactones. Having purified avermectin, the Merck team subjected the
compound to structural modification, ultimately producing a chemical known as ivermectin.
Ivermectin
was found to be active against a wide array of microfilariae (larvae) produced
by certain threadlike nematode parasites. Of particular consequence was its
ability to clear infections in humans involving the microfilariae of Onchocerca
volvulus, the cause of river blindness, and Wuchereria bancrofti and Brugia
malayi, the major causes of lymphatic filariasis (elephantiasis). Both river
blindness and lymphatic filariasis were significant sources of debilitating
illness in tropical regions of the world. The drug also proved critical to the
prevention of certain arthropod and microfilariae-associated infections in
other animals, including horses, sheep, and cattle; it also was used widely for
the prevention of heartworm disease in cats and dogs.
In later
research Campbell studied a variety of parasitic diseases, including
trichinosis. He retired as research fellow emeritus at Drew University in New
Jersey. During his career he served as the president of multiple organizations,
including the American Society of Parasitologists. In addition to numerous
research papers, Campbell edited two texts, Trichinella and Trichinosis (1983)
and Chemotherapy of Parasitic Diseases (1986, with Robert S. Rew), which were
critical to furthering the understanding of parasitic disease.
With
affection,
Ruben
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