Edmund Kornfeld

Edmund Carl Kornfeld

Edmund Carl Kornfeld (24 February 1919 – 22 June 2012) was an American organic chemist who devoted his life to the research of new drugs.[1] His leading discovery, with the help of a team, was a unique antibiotic later known as Vancomycin.[2] Kornfeld received his PhD in chemistry from Harvard in 1944 and subsequently joined Eli Lilly Company, in Indianapolis, US. It was there where most of his discoveries took place.

In 1953, Kornfeld and his team isolated an unknown microbe, Streptomyces orientalis, which was found in soil samples from Borneo. This microbe produced a unique compound which had the remarkable property of killing all staphylococci bacteria, including the penicillin-resistant strains. The drug’s ability to inhibit straphylococci was stable during early assays, suggesting that it might be clinically useful for a long period.

One of the most difficult tasks that Kornfeld and his team faced was purifying the new compound. The purification method employed during that time utilised picric acid - a potentially explosive chemical; because of this an alternate process was developed. However, this new method yielded material with a purity of only 82% and when solubilized, produced a brown liquid aptly termed “Mississippi mud”. However, due to the need for an alternative to penicillin in resistant bacterial infections, the initial preparations were considered safe enough for use in humans.

The first human trial was in 1950. The drug was given to a patient that had developed a severe infection on his foot after surgery which was unresposnsive to multiple antibiotics. The surgical staff recommended amputation or the usage of the new antibiotic. His answer was ‘ Anything that might save my foot’. Due to the spread of the bacteria, a high dosage the antibiotic of 05865 was recommended, 100 mg every eight hours, over five days. After the first day, the heat was decreasing, his white cell count was dropping and the exudate of his wound was less. During the next seven days, the staphylococci disappeared from the wound, and his foot was free from any sign of infection. Two months later he left the hospital with an intact foot.

The new antibiotic was named Vancomycin, from the term "vanquish" and was FDA approved in 1958.

Published books

Condensation of heterocyclic bases with acetylene dicarboxylic ester. Publisher: Harvard University, 1945.

The Total Synthesis of Lysergic Acid.[3] Edmund C. Kornfeld, E. J. Fornefeld, G. Bruce Kline, Marjorie J. Mann, Dwight E. Morrison, Reuben G. Jones, R. B. Woodward.

References

  1. "Edmund C. Kornfeld Obituary: View Edmund Kornfeld's Obituary by The Indianapolis Star". Legacy.com. 2012-06-22. Retrieved 2012-07-06.
  2. Griffith RS. Introduction to vancomycin. Rev Infect Dis 1981;3:S200-4
  3. Edmund C. Kornfeld, E.J. Fornefeld, G. Bruce Kline, Marjorie J. Mann, Dwight E. Morrison, Reuben G. Jones and R.B. Woodward (1956). "The Total Synthesis of Lysergic Acid". Journal of the American Chemical Society 78: 3087-3114.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/18/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.