|
Peyton
Rous was born in Texas in 1879. His mother's ancestors were Huguenots
who settled in Virginia after the Edict of Nantes. Just before the Civil
War in the 1860's her father, foreseeing disaster, bought land in Texas,
moving his big family there after it ended. There he became a judge «riding
three counties», and the family throve.
His father, a Baltimorean
of English forebears, married his mother while visiting Texas, and returning
home became an exporter of grain to Europe. His father died early, leaving
his mother with three small children and only scanty means to support
them. Yet she would not return to the security of her Texas kin because
she was bent on obtaining the best possible education for her children;
and what with makeshifts of one sort or another in Baltimore she did it!
During his second year in the Johns Hopkins Medical School - after getting
a B. A. from its University in 1900 - Peyton Rous scraped the skin of
a finger on a tuberculous bone while doing an autopsy and soon a «corpse
tubercle» formed there. The disease travelled to his axillary glands,
and after their removal he was told no more could be done than «to go
away and try to get well». Peyton Rous went to Texas, there an uncle got
him a job «for his keep» on a ranch near Quanah; and in early spring a
friend living in the town told him he was sending «two covered wagons»
full of hardware to the Spur Ranch, 125 miles west of the railway, and
asked if Peyton would like to go along with them. On reaching «The Spur»
Peyton Rous was given the job of helping on horseback in the «round ups»
of cattle scattered on its huge expanse, and of course he slept on the
ground like everyone. During exhilarating months there Peyton learned
a superb fact not taught at college, namely that uneducated men can be
as great-hearted and lovable as those who know much. This has been a continual
source of cheer to him ever since.
Back at the Medical School after having lost (!) a year, he graduated
in 1905 and became an interne in its Hospital. Then, finding himself unfit
to be a «real doctor», he turned to medical research instead, and for
this purpose became an Instructor in Pathology at the University of Michigan
on a beggarly salary. His work in the laboratory turned out to be mainly
that of a technician because the University had small funds only, but
with noble generosity Professor Alfred Warthin, head of the Department,
came to his rescue, actually offering to «teach Summer School» in his
stead, and give Peyton the sum thus earned, if he would study German hard
and use the money to go for the summer to a certain hospital in Dresden
where morbid anatomy was taught. Dresden in 1907! Exquisite city in an
exquisite land, with no hint of war in the air!
After his return
Dr. Warthin told Peyton Rous that the Rockefeller Institute for Medical
Research was casting a wide net of grants for beginners, and he asked
him if Peyton would like him to apply for one that would free Peyton for
experimental work. That grant enabled Rous to find out enough about lymphocytes
to be deemed worth publishing in the Journal of Experimental Medicine,
edited by Simon Flexner, who was also the director of the Institute; and
after another few months Flexner asked Rous to take over the laboratory
for cancer research which Flexner was quitting to learn more about poliomyelitis,
then crippling many American children.
Since these happenings in 1909 the life of Peyton Rous as a working scientist
has been halcyon. Soon after beginning it he was able to prove that some
«spontaneous» chicken tumours, to all appearances classical neoplasms,
are actually started off and driven by viruses which determine their forms
as well. These findings led him to spend several years trying to get similar
agents from mouse cancers; but, failing in this, he left off working with
tumours in 1915, turning instead to the study of other problems in physiological
pathology. The results of the study encouraged Rous to undertake further
efforts in the same field, and he did not return to the theme of cancer
until 1934 when a unique opportunity was offered to him. Dr. Richard Shope,
a close friend on the Institute staff, asked Rous to work with a virus
which Shope had discovered and found to be responsible for the giant warts
often present on the skin of wild rabbits in the southwestern U. S. A.
Were they perhaps real tumours? Rous could not resist this generous challenge
and he has worked ever since not only with the «warts» themselves - which
proved to be benign tumours from which cancers frequently take off - but
with other problems of neoplasms.
Investigation on cancer means more to the public than that on any other
disease. It may be partly for that reason that Rous has received more
than a few honours and awards. Many universities have given him honorary
degrees. He is a Foreign Member of the Royal Society of England, as also
of its Royal Society of Medicine, and that of Denmark, and the Norwegian
Academy of Science and Letters. The Weizmann Institute of Science has
appointed Rous an Honorary Fellow and the Academy of Medicine in Paris
a Foreign Correspondent. The Kovalenko Medal of the National Academy of
Sciences, and the Distinguished Service Award of the American Cancer Society
were given to him. Rous also received a Lasker Award of the American Public
Health Association, as also a United Nations Prize for Cancer Research;
and during 1966 a National Medal of Science has come to him from the U
S.A., and the Paul Ehrlich-Ludwig Darmstadter Award from the Federal Republic
of Germany.
In 1920 Peyton Rous became a Member of the Rockefeller Institute, and
in 1945, when 65 years old, he became a Member Emeritus but continued
to be busy in the laboratory as was the case until his death. Recently
the Rockefeller Institute has become the Rockefeller University. It supported
the work of Rous as amply as was his good fortune in the past.
Peyton Rous married
Marion Eckford deKay; she was the daughter of a scholarly commentator
on the arts. They brought to each other different likings that have delightfully
widened the enjoyment of their lives together. They have three daughters:
Marion, Ellen and Phoebe. Marion's husband, Alan Hodgkin is a Professor
of Biophysics at Cambridge University and received the Nobel Prize for
Physiology or Medicine in 1963. Phoebe married Thomas J. Wilson who died
in 1969; he was formerly Director of the Harvard University Press.
Dr Peyton Rous* died on the 16th of February, 1970.
*In
this biography, which is based on Rous's own autobiographical note, nothing
has been said about the work on blood and liver which occupied him between
1915 and 1934. In particular Rous has not mentioned the pioneer research
on blood transfusion with J. R. Turner and O. H. Robertson which led to
the establishment in 1917 of the world's first blood bank near the front
line in Belgium.
From Nobel Lectures,
Physiology or Medicine 1963-1970.
|