Tamara Iosifovna Balezina
Tamara Iosifovna Balezina (28 April 1913[1] – 11 August 2010) was a Soviet Union-Russian microbiologist and biologist who played a key role in the discovery and production of penicillin in the Soviet Union. Early life and educationBalezina attended a seven-year medical program and started in 1929 at the Stalin Medical Institute, but she moved to the Kuibyshev Medical Institute after two years in 1931.[1] She graduated with honors from the sanitary and hygienic faculty of the Kuibyshev Medical Institute in 1935.[citation needed] She began postgraduate studies in microbiology in 1936, and transferred to the graduate school of V.I.E.M. (Institute of Experimental Medicine) in Moscow to follow her husband.[citation needed] On 7 June 1944, she defended her Ph.D. thesis on "Derivation, research and clinical applications of penicillin".[1] CareerIn 1942 she was tasked with organizing a laboratory to conduct research on penicillin in 1942 and she was the one responsible for the hands-on work while Zinaida Yermolyeva organized the Laboratory of Biochemical Microbes.[2][3]: 130 Balezina began to collect fungus in the area around the laboratory and was able to find a fungus that provided antibiotic capacity but was less effective than the strains from Alexander Fleming. Subsequent work led her to investigate molds from potatoes and in the 93rd iteration of cultures she identified a strain that was similar to Penicillium crustosum[4] with higher activity than Fleming's strain of Penicillium.[3]: 130 By 1944, the resulting drug was available for use in the war.[3]: 130–131 According to Balezina, while she was working on the isolation of Penicillium strains, Yermolyeva was working on a cholera outbreak,[5] yet Yermolyeva received more credit for the penicillin research.[2] From 1950s she worked on the methods of interferon production and the formation of interferon in cells.[1] In 1972 she patented a method of interferon production in animal cell cultures using plant viruses as interferon inductors.[citation needed] From 1945 to 1952, she was a senior researcher at the All-Union Research Institute of Penicillin and Other Antibiotics and the Institute of Epidemiology and Microbiology. From 1955 to 1956, she worked at the CIU doctors, and from 1956 to 1975, at the Institute of Virology. She then retired and worked on a voluntary basis as reception in the health room at the P.R.U.E. (Plekhanov Russian University of Economics, formerly known as the Karl Marx Moscow Institute of the National Economy).[citation needed] Personal lifeBalezina was born in 1913 in Starobelisk in a family of physicians.[1] She lived in Moscow until her death on August 11, 2010, at the age of 97.[citation needed] Awards
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