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VELVET REVOLUTION: Lederberg’s technique used
fabric to transfer bacteria.
Courtesy Matthew Simon |
MICROBIOLOGY PIONEER
History perhaps will remember Esther Lederberg as a
giant in microbiology—a correction to her unsung
contributions to the Nobel Prize in 1958 for discoveries
about how bacteria mutate. Lederberg, MA ’46,
a professor emerita of microbiology and immunology,
died November 11 of congestive heart failure and pneumonia.
She was 83.
Esther Zimmer was born into a poor family in the Bronx
and entered Hunter College at the end of the Depression.
She intended to study literature or French, but switched
to science. When she told her advisers, they were shocked,
says her husband, Matthew Simon; they considered the
move foolish because women’s career options in
science were so limited.
She worked as a teaching assistant at Stanford while
pursuing a master’s degree. Her income was so
small that she and colleagues sometimes resorted to
eating frog legs left over after dissections, Simon
reports.
In 1946, she married Joshua Lederberg and joined him
at the University of Wisconsin, where she earned her
PhD. One of her first major breakthroughs was the discovery
of lambda bacteriophage, a virus that lives in E. coli.
This “temperate” phage didn’t kill
off the host, but instead mingled with the host’s
DNA. The work had implications for the study of more
complicated viruses and for genetic recombination.
While studying mutations of bacteria, she and Joshua
developed a laboratory technique called replica plating.
By transferring bacteria from one plate to another,
they could isolate mutations—like antibiotic resistance—and
prove that they were present in the original setting.
Eventually the couple used pieces of velvet to move
colonies from one plate to another, but the initial
experiments were done using the powder puff from Esther’s
compact.
Joshua Lederberg and two men from other universities
were awarded the Nobel Prize in 1958. In its presentation
speech, the Nobel committee said “bacterial genetics
has been developed, primarily through the efforts of
[Joshua] Lederberg and his co-workers, into an extensive
research field in recent years.”
In 1959, the Lederbergs returned to Stanford, where
Joshua Lederberg founded the department of genetics.
Simon says that Esther Lederberg and another woman lobbied
the dean of the Medical School to name a female faculty
member. He did appoint Esther Lederberg—but to
an untenured post. Esther and Joshua Lederberg divorced
in 1966.
From 1976 until 1985, Esther Lederberg directed Stanford’s
plasmid reference center, and she continued to work
at the lab even after she retired as director.
Simon and Lederberg met in 1989 through the Mid-Peninsula
Recorder Orchestra, which Lederberg, an aficionado of
Baroque and Renaissance music, helped establish. The
couple married in 1993. Lederberg also is survived by
her brother, Benjamin Zimmer.
ADVOCATE FOR WILD MARIN
Marin County naturalist and educator Elizabeth Cooper
Terwilliger, ’39 (nursing), died November 27 in
a Mill Valley retirement home. She was 97.
Founder of the Terwilliger Nature Education Center,
which later became WildCare, the straw-hatted Terwilliger
spent decades walking nature trails, campaigning for
open space and wetland preservation, and imparting a
love of the outdoors to generations of children. She
attended the U. of Hawaii, earned a master’s in
nutrition from Columbia U. and became a registered nurse
after studying at Stanford. President Reagan presented
her with the national Volunteer Action Award in 1984.
A grove and a marsh have been named for her, and she
was inducted into the Marin Women’s Hall of Fame.
Her husband of 51 years, Calvin, ’35, MD ’39,
died in 1990. Survivors: one son, John; one daughter,
Lynn Ellen; and three grandchildren. |