Dr. Robert Charles Gallo (born 1937)

Dr. Robert Gallo at the National Cancer Institutehttps://www.verywellhealth.com/robert-gallo-at-the-center-of-the-history-of-hiv-48019Robert Gallo, Co-Discoverer of HIV : Contribution to Identifying the Cause of AIDS Still Shrouded in ControversyBy James Myhre & Dennis Sifris, MD / Fact checked by Ashley Hall on June 25, 20202020-06-25-verywellhealth-com-robert-gallo-at-the-center-of-the-history-of-hiv-48019.pdf2020-06-25-verywellhealth-com-robert-gallo-at-the-center-of-the-history-of-hiv-48019-3-56c426af3df78c0b1399fab3.jpg

Wikipedia 🌐 Robert Gallo


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Saved Wikipedia (Sep 22, 2021) - "Robert Gallo"

Source : [HK007Y][GDrive]

Born March 23, 1937 (age 84) in Waterbury, Connecticut, United States

Education

Providence College (B.S.)

Thomas Jefferson University (MD)

Years active

1963–present

Known for

Co-discoverer of HIV

Medical career


Profession

Medical doctor

Institutions

National Cancer Institute

Sub-specialties

Infectious disease and virology

Research

Biomedical research

Awards

Lasker Award (1982, 1986)

Charles S. Mott Prize (1984)

Dickson Prize (1985)

Japan Prize (1988)

Dan David Prize (2009)

Robert Charles Gallo (/ˈɡɑːloʊ/; born March 23, 1937) is an American biomedical researcher. He is best known for his role in the discovery of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) as the infectious agent responsible for acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) and in the development of the HIV blood test, and he has been a major contributor to subsequent HIV research.

Gallo is the director and co-founder of the Institute of Human Virology (IHV) at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland, established in 1996 in a partnership including the State of Maryland and the City of Baltimore. In November 2011, Gallo was named the first Homer & Martha Gudelsky Distinguished Professor in Medicine. Gallo is also a co-founder of biotechnology company Profectus BioSciences, Inc. and co-founder and scientific director of the Global Virus Network (GVN).

Gallo was the most cited scientist in the world from 1980 to 1990, according to the Institute for Scientific Information, and he was ranked third in the world for scientific impact for the period 1983–2002.[1] He has published over 1,300 papers.[2]

Early life and education

Gallo was born in Waterbury, Connecticut to a working-class family of Italian descent.[3] He earned a BS degree in Biology in 1959 from Providence College and received an MD from Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1963.[3] After completing his medical residency at the University of Chicago, he became a researcher at the National Cancer Institute, where he worked for 30 years, mainly as head of the Laboratory of Tumor Cell Biology.[3]

Career

Gallo states that his choice of profession was influenced by the early death of his sister from leukemia, a disease to which he initially dedicated much of his research.[4]

Interleukin-2 (IL-2) and the discovery of human retroviruses

After listening to a talk by biologist [Dr. David Baltimore (born 1938)] and further stimulation from his virologist colleague, Robert Ting, concerning the work of the late [Dr. Howard Martin Temin (born 1934)], Gallo became interested in the study of retroviruses, and made their study the primary activity of his lab. In 1976, Doris Morgan, a first year post-doctoral fellow in Gallo's lab, was asked by Gallo to examine culture fluid of activated lymphocytes for the possible production of growth factors. Soon she was successful in growing T lymphocytes. Gallo, Morgan and [Dr. Francis William Ruscetti (born 1943)], another researcher in Gallo's lab, coauthored a paper in Science describing their method.[5] The Gallo group identified this as T-cell growth factor (TCGF). The name was changed in 1978 to IL-2 (interleukin-2) by the Second International Lymphokine Conference (which was held in Interlaken, Switzerland).[6][7] Although earlier reports had described soluble molecules with biologic effects, the effects and biochemistry of the factors were not well characterized. One such example was the report by Julius Gordon in 1965,[8] which described blastogenic transformation of lymphocytes in extracellular media. However, cell growth was not demonstrated and the affected cell type was not identified, making the identity of the factor(s) involved unclear and its natural function unknown.

The discovery of IL-2 allowed T cells, previously thought to be dead end cells, to be grown significantly in culture for the first time, opening research into many aspects of T cell immunology. Gallo's lab later purified and biochemically characterized IL-2.[9] This breakthrough also allowed researchers to grow T-cells and study the viruses that affect them, such as human T-cell leukemia virus, or HTLV, the first retrovirus identified in humans, which Bernard Poiesz, another post-doctoral fellow in Gallo's lab played a key role in its isolation.[10] HTLV's role in leukemia was clarified when Kiyoshi Takatsuki and other Japanese researchers, puzzling over an outbreak of a rare form of leukemia,[11] later independently found the same retrovirus,[12] and both groups showed HTLV to be the cause.[13][14] At the same time, a similar HTLV-associated leukemia was identified by the Gallo group in the Caribbean.[15] In 1982, Gallo received the Lasker Award: "For his pioneering studies that led to the discovery of the first human RNA tumor virus [the old name for retroviruses] and its association with certain leukemias and lymphomas."[16]

HIV/AIDS research

On May 4, 1984, Gallo and his collaborators published a series of four papers in the scientific journal Science[17] demonstrating that a retrovirus they had isolated, called HTLV-III in the belief that the virus was related to the leukemia viruses of Gallo's earlier work, was the cause of AIDS.[18] A French team at the Pasteur Institute in Paris, France, led by Luc Montagnier, had published a paper in Science in 1983, describing a retrovirus they called LAV (lymphadenopathy associated virus), isolated from a patient at risk for AIDS.[19]

Gallo was awarded his second Lasker Award in 1986 for "determining that the retrovirus now known as HIV-1 is the cause of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS)." He is the only recipient of two Lasker Awards.[16] In 1986, Gallo, Dharam Ablashi, and Syed Zaki Salahuddin discovered human herpesvirus 6 (HHV-6),[20] later found to cause Roseola infantum, an infantile disease. In 1989, at a conference sponsored by the Catholic Church at Vatican City on HIV/AIDS, Gallo promised attendees that there would be an effective vaccine by 1992.[21]

In 1991, following years of controversy surrounding a 1987 out of court settlement between the National Institutes of Health and France's Pasteur Institute, Gallo admitted the virus he claimed to have discovered in 1984 was in reality a virus sent to him from France the year before, putting an end to a six-year effort by Gallo and his employer, the National Institutes of Health, to claim the AIDS virus as an independent discovery.[22]

In 1995, Gallo with his colleagues Paolo Lusso and Fiorenza Cocchi published their discovery that chemokines, a class of naturally occurring compounds, are potent and specific HIV inhibitors.[23] This discovery was heralded by Science magazine as one of the top scientific breakthroughs of the year.[24][25] The role chemokines play in controlling the progression of HIV infection has influenced thinking on how AIDS works against the human immune system[26] and led to a class of drugs used to treat HIV, the chemokine antagonists or entry inhibitors, and helped (conceptually) in the advances that led to the discovery of the cell co-receptor for HIV infection, because this is the molecule the HIV inhibitory molecules bind.

Gallo and two longtime scientific collaborators, [Dr. Robert Ray Redfield Jr. (born 1951)] and [Dr. William Albert Blattner (born 1943)], founded the Institute of Human Virology in 1996. Gallo's team at the institute maintain an ongoing program of scientific research and clinical care and treatment for people living with HIV/AIDS, treating more than 5,000 patients in Baltimore and 500,000 patients at institute-supported clinics in Africa and the Caribbean.[27] In July 2007, Gallo and his team were awarded a $15 million grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation for research into a preventive vaccine for HIV/AIDS. Additionally, in 2011 Gallo and his team received $23.4 million from a consortium of funding sources to support the next phase of research into the Institute of Human Virology's (IHV) promising HIV/AIDS preventive vaccine candidate. The IHV vaccine program grants included $16.8 million from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, $2.2 million from the U.S. Army's Military HIV Research Program (MHRP), and other research funding from a variety of sources including the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH).[28]

Priority and the 2008 Nobel Prize

Assignment of priority for the discovery of HIV has been controversial and was a subplot in the 1993 American television film docudrama (and earlier book about the early history of AIDS) And the Band Played On.

Montagnier's group in France isolated HIV almost one and a half years before Gallo,[29] while Gallo's group demonstrated that the virus causes AIDS and generated much of the science that made the discovery possible, including a technique previously developed by Gallo's lab for growing T cells in the laboratory.[5] When Montagnier's group first published their discovery, they said HIV's role in causing AIDS "remains to be determined."[30]

In 1989, the investigative journalist John Crewdson[31] suggested that Gallo's lab might have misappropriated a sample of HIV isolated at the Pasteur Institute by Montagnier's group.[32] Investigations by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the HHS ultimately cleared Gallo's group of any wrongdoing[30][33] and demonstrated that they had numerous isolates of HIV of their own. As part of these investigations, the United States Office of Research Integrity at the National Institutes of Health commissioned Hoffmann–La Roche scientists to analyze archival samples established at the Pasteur Institute and the Laboratory of Tumor Cell Biology (LTCB) of the National Cancer Institute between 1983 and 1985. They concluded that the virus used in Gallo's lab had come from Montagnier's lab; it was a virus from a patient that had contaminated a virus sample from another patient. On request, Montagnier's group had sent a sample of this culture to Gallo, not knowing it contained two viruses. The sample then contaminated the pooled culture on which Gallo was working.[34] On 12 December 1985 the Institut Pasteur filed suit to challenge a patent for an HIV test that had been granted on 28 May 1985 to the United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).[18] In 1987, the two governments agreed to split equally the proceeds from the patent,[18] naming Montagnier and Gallo co-discoverers.[30][35] Montagnier and Gallo resumed collaborating with each other again for a chronology that appeared in Nature in 1987.[30]

In the November 29, 2002 issue of Science, Gallo and Montagnier published a series of articles, one of which was co-written by both scientists, in which they acknowledged the pivotal roles that each had played in the discovery of HIV,[36][37][38] as well as a historical review in the New England Journal of Medicine.[39]

In 2008, Montagnier and his colleague Françoise Barré-Sinoussi from the Institut Pasteur were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their work on the discovery of HIV.[40] Harald zur Hausen also shared the Prize for his discovery that human papilloma viruses lead to cervical cancer,[40] but Gallo was left out.[30] Gallo said that it was "a disappointment" that he was not named a co-recipient.[41] Montagnier said he was "surprised" Gallo was not recognized by the Nobel Committee: "It was important to prove that HIV was the cause of AIDS, and Gallo had a very important role in that. I'm very sorry for Robert Gallo."[30]

Organizations

In 2005, Gallo co-founded Profectus BioSciences, Inc., a biotechnology company. Profectus develops and commercializes technologies to reduce the morbidity and mortality caused by human viral diseases, including HIV.[42]

In March 2011, Gallo founded the Global Virus Network in conjunction with William Hall of University College Dublin and Reinhard Kurth of the Robert Koch Institute. The network's goals include increasing collaboration among virus scholars, expanding virologist training programs, and overcoming gaps in research, especially during the early stages of viral epidemics.[43]

References

Further reading


External links

Wikiquote has quotations related to: Robert Gallo


Wikimedia Commons has media related to Robert Charles Gallo.



1991 (Jan 31) - Chicago Tribune : EX-GALLO AIDE CHARGED WITH EMBEZZLEMENT

John Crewdson, Chicago Tribune / Source : [HN010Z][GDrive]

A former longtime deputy to AIDS researcher Dr. Robert Gallo has been charged with stealing $25,000 that a German pharmaceutical firm paid the U.S. government for biological research in the Gallo laboratory.

The former deputy, Dr. Prem Sarin, 57, was charged by a federal grand jury here last week with embezzlement and three other violations of federal law, including two felony charges of making false statements on financial disclosure forms.

Sarin is the second scientist from the Gallo lab to have been charged with criminal offenses by the U.S. attorney`s office here. Last year, Syed Salahuddin, another longtime Gallo aide, pleaded guilty to accepting illegal gratuities from a Maryland company that supplied the Gallo lab with services and materials.

Ties between that company, Pan-Data Systems, and another Gallo assistant, Dr. Dharam Ablashi, are being investigated by Richard Kusserow, inspector-general of the Department of Health and Human Services, according to sources familiar with that investigation.

Kusserow`s investigators are also conducting an inquiry into possible perjury and false statements by Gallo himself in connection with his prize-winning AIDS research at the National Cancer Institute in suburban Bethesda, Md., just outside Washington.

The cancer institute is part of the National Institutes of Health, which is an agency of the Department of Health and Human Services. Kusserow, who previously headed the white-collar fraud unit in the Chicago office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, has oversight responsibility at HHS.

According to federal court files in the Sarin case, Sarin had tentatively agreed to plead guilty earlier this month to two lesser offenses. When that deal fell through, federal prosecutors asked the grand jury to charge the scientist with four violations of law, including embezzlement.

The offenses to which Sarin had agreed to plead guilty carry a maximum penalty of six years in prison and a $350,000 fine. The maximum for the four offenses with which he is now charged is 21 years in prison and a fine of $850,000.

Asked why his client had chosen to stand trial, Sarin`s attorney, W. Neil Eggleston, said only, ''He`s innocent.'' Eggleston declined to confirm reports that Sarin had repaid the $25,000 that is the focus of the alleged embezzlement.

Other sources close to the case suggested that Sarin had withdrawn from the deal because of prosecutors` insistence that any plea bargain include some jail time.

2001 (Sep 11)

Full newspaper page : [HN01R7][GDrive] / Also mentioned : Dr. Anthony Louis DeVico (born 1957) / Dr. Robert Charles Gallo (born 1937)

At the University of Maryland Institute of Human Virology ... was Dr. Robert Wallace Malone (born 1959) there (1997 to 2000) ? His resume/CV reads : "University of Maryland, Baltimore School of Medicine, Dept. of Pathology / Assistant Professor 1997-2000 / Set-up and ran successful research laboratory in immunology (genetic vaccination) and gene transfer."

2020 (July 17) - NYTimes : "Flossie Wong-Staal, Who Unlocked Mystery of H.I.V., Dies at 73"

A molecular biologist, she helped establish the virus as the cause of AIDS, then cloned it and took it apart to understand how it evades the immune system.

By Faye Flam / Published July 17, 2020Updated July 20, 2020 / Source : [HN01RN][GDrive]

[Dr. Flossie Wong-Staal (born 1946)], a molecular biologist who helped establish H.I.V. as the cause of AIDS, revealed the virus’s inner-workings by cloning it and then laid the foundation for treatments, died on July 8 in San Diego. She was 73.

Her death, at Jacobs Medical Center in the La Jolla section of the city, was caused by complications of pneumonia not related to Covid-19, her husband, Jeffrey McKelvy, said.

Her former colleague [Dr. Robert Charles Gallo (born 1937)] said Dr. Wong-Staal was a “whiz kid” in molecular biology when she went to work for the National Institutes of Health in the 1970s, adept at manipulating the components of living things like DNA and proteins.

Calm and collected, she produced dozens of groundbreaking papers amid personal and professional turmoil in the lab at a time when Dr. Gallo, its leader, was caught up in investigations over his disputed claim to have discovered H.I.V.

Dr. Wong-Staal was a member of the National Academy of Medicine and was inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame last year. Her work was so prolific and influential that the magazine The Scientist named her the most cited female scientist of the 1980s.

“Flossie was the best of the best,” Dr. Gallo said in an interview.

Dr. Wong-Staal joined Dr. Gallo after he had started studying what was then considered an obscure class of viruses known as retroviruses. Unlike ordinary viruses, retroviruses invade the cellular nucleus and insert their genes into the DNA of their hosts. Retroviruses had been observed in birds and mice but not humans, and Dr. Gallo’s research was ridiculed at first.

He soon discovered the first human retrovirus, called HTLV-1, which caused a kind of leukemia in humans. Dr. Wong-Staal went to work studying its various parts and how the virus interfered with human DNA to activate certain cancer-causing genes called oncogenes. Her work contributed to the broader understanding of the role of oncogenes in cancers not associated with viruses.

In a strange coincidence, a year after HTLV-1 was discovered, Dr. Gallo and Dr. Wong-Staal suspected that another human retrovirus might be the cause of a new disease that was spreading in the gay community and elsewhere. Eventually called AIDS, the mysterious disease had many traits in common with HTLV-1: Both were transmitted sexually, through blood or from mother to child, and both infected T-cells, a type of white blood cell.

Dr. Gallo and Dr. Wong-Staal turned out to be right, but they were not alone. While Dr. Gallo and a French group led by Luc Montagnier were locked into a protracted fight over who got credit for discovering H.I.V., Dr. Wong-Staal moved the science forward by figuring out how the virus worked.

She took the virus apart, probing its genes and proteins to see what each component did. One protein became the target of the drug AZT; another became the target of a class of drugs known as protease inhibitors.

In Dr. Gallo’s 1991 book, “Virus Hunting,” Dr. Wong-Staal was quoted as saying: “Working with this virus is like putting your hand in a treasure chest. Every time you put your hand in, you pull out a gem.”

Her virology work is now being deployed in the fight against the novel coronavirus.

“H.I.V. research built a strong foundation for Covid-19 research,” said David Ho, a Columbia University virologist, who directs the Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center there. “It’s why things are moving so fast on the vaccine front and the antibody front, as well as the development of drugs.”

Yee Ching Wong was born on Aug. 27, 1946, in Guangzhou, China, to Sueh-Fung Wong, who was in the import-export business, and Wei-Chung (Chor), a homemaker. The family moved to Hong Kong in 1952.

She attended a Roman Catholic girls school, where her teachers noticed her academic talents and encouraged her to adopt an English name. She asked her father for help. “She said, ‘I don’t want to be another Teresa or Mary,’” Mr. McKelvy, her husband, said.

Her father came up with Flossie, taking it from a hurricane by that name. “He said, ‘That’s you, you’re a Flossie,’” Mr. McKelvy said.

Dr. Wong-Staal moved to the United States to study bacteriology at the University of California, Los Angeles, graduating magna cum laude in 1968. She earned a doctorate in molecular biology from U.C.L.A. in 1972. While attending graduate school she married Stephen Staal and had a daughter with him. The marriage ended in divorce in 1986.

[Dr. Flossie Wong-Staal (born 1946)] went to work with Dr. Gallo at the National Institutes of Health in 1973 and was quickly promoted to lead a group of molecular biologists. When the lab turned its attention to AIDS, she was the first to transform H.I.V. from tissue and blood samples into something that could be studied using a labor-intensive process known as cloning.

Cloning allowed researchers to study each part of the virus, and in doing so it revealed a critical facet that made H.I.V. so challenging to fight: its genetic diversity.

“We now know this diversity is enormous, and is a big obstacle to vaccine development,” said Prof. Beatrice Hahn of the University of Pennsylvania, who worked with Dr. Wong-Staal.

That diversity — a surprise to the researchers, since other retroviruses did not have this feature — allowed H.I.V. to evade the immune system. But once they figured out the role of the individual genes and proteins, they could target them. “It was a logical next step in characterizing a completely new pathogen,” Professor Hahn said. “It was an exciting time, and Flossie was in charge.”

In 1990, Dr. Wong-Staal took a job at the University of California, San Diego, where she continued to study H.I.V., looking for new treatments and a vaccine. In 2002 she became the chief scientific officer of Immusol, a biotech company she co-founded. She later renamed it iTherX Pharmaceuticals, after its had mission shifted from AIDS to hepatitis C. (The company is no longer active.)

Dr. Wong-Staal had a longstanding romantic relationship with Dr. Gallo, which was well known in the virology community, and she was open about the fact that he had fathered her second child.

In interviews, she called him a polarizing figure. Dr. Gallo had originally claimed that a variant of his original human retrovirus, which he called HTLV-3, was the cause of AIDS. The French lab led by Dr. Montagnier proposed a different virus, called L.A.V., which proved to be the right one and was later named H.I.V.

Dr. Gallo would himself propose L.A.V. as the virus that causes AIDS, but the French researchers accused him of using samples obtained from their lab. That led to federal investigations, a patent dispute and, in 2002, a 670-page book by the journalist John Crewdson, though the fight was never completely resolved.

Through it all, Dr. Wong-Staal was known for navigating this brutally competitive, male-dominated research world with quiet confidence, while supporting the many younger researchers in her lab who went on to have extraordinary careers.

“She was strong and resilient,” Dr. Gallo said. “We could be like bulldogs, but I think she was able to get up easier.”

In addition to her husband, Ms. Wong-Staal is survived by her daughters Stephanie Staal and Caroline Vega; a sister Nancy Yao; two brothers, Raymond Wong and Patrick Wong; and four grandchildren.

Mr. McKelvy said that he and Ms. Wong-Staal had taken up ballroom dancing in her last decade for recreation, but that even there her competitive nature eventually came through. “It became a passion, and she took it really seriously, as she did most things,” he said. It wasn’t long before they were entering competitions.