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Zinaida Vissarionovna Ermol'eva

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Notable awards
  
Order of Lenin

Zinaida Vissarionovna Ermol'eva

Born
  
Zinaida Vissarionovna Ermol'eva October 27, 1898 Frolovo, Don Host Oblast, Russian Empire (
1898-10-27
)

Known for
  
Inventor of Penicillin in the USSR

Died
  
2 December 1974, Moscow, Russia

Alma mater
  
Southern Federal University

Fields
  
Microbiology, Epidemiology

Zinaida Vissarionovna Ermol'eva (Russian: Зинаида Виссарионовна Ермольева) (October 27 [O.S. October 15] 1898 - December 2, 1974) was a microbiologist most notable for independently synthesizing penicillin for the Soviet military during World War II. She was a member of the USSR Academy of Medical Sciences at the time of her death.

Contents

Career

In 1921, Ermol'eva graduated from the medical faculty of Donskoy University. From 1925 on, she acted as the head of several microbiology and epidemiology institutes in Moscow.

In 1925, Ermol'eva was appointed head of the Department of Microbial Biochemistry at the USSR Academy of Sciences. There, she began her research on bacteriophages and naturally-occurring antimicrobial agents—lysozyme in particular. During the Second World War, she isolated a penicillin-producing strain of Penicillium crustosum. It was first used in Soviet hospitals in 1943.

In 1942, she published the results of an experiment performed on herself, where she infected herself by drinking a solution of Vibrio cholerae and recovered after treatment. The results of her research were seen as essential in preventative measures against cholera in Russia's war efforts in the Eastern Front of World War II.

In 1947, Ermol'eva became the director of the newly formed Institute of Antibiotics of the USSR Ministry of Public Health. From 1952 until her death, she headed the Department of Microbiology of the Central Post-Graduate Medical Institute in Moscow (now the Russian Medical Academy of Postgraduate Education).

Ermol'eva was married to the microbiologist Lev Zilber, whose brother, the novelist Veniamin Kaverin used the career of Ermol'eva and her husband as a basis for a fictionalized account in his trilogy Open Book (1949–56). The "lively and realistic" depiction of Tatiana, the character based on Ermol'eva, popularized microbiology as a possible career among girls in the Soviet Union.

Awards and recognition

  • State Prize of the USSR - 1943
  • Order of Lenin x2
  • Scientific interests

  • Antibiotics
  • Bacterial polysaccharides
  • Biologically active substances from animal tissues
  • Interferon
  • Chemotherapy of infection
  • Scientific writing

    Ermolieva was the author of more than 500 papers, several books, such as "Penicillin", "Antibiotics, Bacterial Polysaccharides, Interferon" and others. She was the founder and chief editor of the Soviet journal Antibiotiki.

    References

    Zinaida Vissarionovna Ermol'eva Wikipedia