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Niels
K. Jerne, born 23rd December 1911, London.
My parents, Hans Jessen Jerne and Else Marie Lindberg, and their ancestors
(back to the seventeenth century and earlier) all lived on the island
Fan? and in a small adjacent area of western Jutland in Denmark. My family
moved to London in 1910, and then to Holland during the first world war.
I received my Baccalaureate in Rotterdam in 1928.
After two years of studying physics at the University of Leiden, I switched
to medicine at the University of Copenhagen where I presented my thesis
on the avidity of antibodies in 1951.
My wife Alexandra
and I married in 1964, and now live in our house near Avignon. Further
details of my curriculum vitae:
Research worker
at the Danish State Serum Institute (1943-1956) Research fellow at the
California Institute of Technology, Pasadena (1954-1955)
Head of the Sections of Biological Standards and of Immunology at the
World Health Organization, Geneva (1956-1962)
Professor of Biophysics at the University of Geneva (1960 - 1962) Professor
of Microbiology and Chairman of the Department, University of Pittsburgh
(1962-1966)
Professor of Experimental Therapy at the Johann-Wolfgang-Goethe-Universitat,
Frankfurt, and Director of the Paul-Ehrlich-Institut, Frankfurt (1966-1969)
Director of the Basel Institute for Immunology, Basel (1969-1980) Special
Immunology Adviser to the Director of the Institut Pasteur, Paris (1981-1982)
Member emeritus and Honorary Chairman of the Advisory Board of the Basel
Institute for Immunology (from 1981)
Member of the WHO Advisory Committee on Medical Research (1949-1968)
Member of the Advisory Committee on Medical Research of the Panamerican
Health Organization (1963-1966)
Member of the Expert Advisory Panel of Immunology of the WHO since 1962
Honorary Member of the Robert-Koch-Institut, Berlin (1966) Foreign Honorary
Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1967)
Member of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences (1969) Chairman, Council
of the European Molecular Biology Organization (1971-1975)
Gairdner Foundation International Award, Toronto (1970)
Doctor of Science, h.c., University of Chicago (1972) Honorary Member
of the American Association of Immunologists (1973)
Foreign Associate of the National Academy of Sciences (USA) (1975)
Waterford Bio-Medical Science Award, La Jolla (1978)
Doctor of Science, h.c., Columbia University, New York (1978) Foreign
Member of the American Philosophical Society (1979) Doctor of Science,
h.c., University of Copenhagen (1979)
Marcel Benoist Prize, Bern (1979)
Fellow of the Royal Society (1980)
Doctor of Science, h.c., University of Basel (1981)
Member of the Académie des Sciences de l'Institut de France (1981)
Paul Ehrlich Prize, Frankfurt (1982)
Honorary Member of the British Society for Immunology (1983) Doctor of
Medicine, h.c., Erasmus University, Rotterdam (1983) The work referred
to in the citation for the award of the Nobel Prize is mainly included
in the following papers: "The natural selection theory of antibody formation"
Proc.Nat.Acad.Sci.USA 41, 849-857, 1955 "Immunological speculations" Ann.Rev.Microbiol.
14, 341-358, 1960 "Plaque formation in agar by single antibody-producing
cells" (with Albert A. Nordin), Science 140, 405, 1963
"The natural selection theory of antibody formation: ten years later"
in "Phage and the origins of molecular biology" Cold Spring Harbor Lab.
of Quant. Biology 301-312, 1966 "Antibodies and learning" in
"The Nerurosciences"
The Rockefeller University Press 200-205, 1967
"Waiting for the End"
Cold Spring Harbor Symp. on Quant. Biology 32, 591-603, 1967 "The somatic
generation of immune recognition"
Eur. J. Immunol. 1, 1-9, 1971
"What precedes clonal
selection?"
in "The ontogeny of Acquired Immunity" Ciba Foundation Symposium, Elsevier,
Amsterdam 1-15, 1972
"Towards a network theory of the immune system"
Ann. Immunol. (Inst. Pasteur) 125C, 373-389, 1974
"The immune system: a web of v-domains"
Academic Press, New York, Harvey Lectures 70, 93-110, 1976 "Idiotypic
networks and other preconceived ideas"
Immunological Reviews 79, 5-24, 1984
From Les Prix Nobel
1984.
Dr Jerne died in
1994.
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