Timeline of immunology
From Timelines
This is a timeline of immunology.
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Time period | Development summary |
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Full timeline
Year | Event type | Details | Country/region |
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430 BC | "Nevertheless, there were intimations as early as 430 B.C. that if one survived a disease, the person thereafter became "immune" to any subsequent exposures."[1] | ||
1700 | "Although most historical accounts credit Edward Jenner for the development of the first immunization process, a previous similar procedure had become established in China by 1700. The technique was called variolation. This was derived from the name of the infective agent—the variola virus."[1] | China | |
1798 | " Edward Jenner initiates smallpox vaccination."[1][2] | ||
1877 | "Paul Ehrlich recognizes mast cells."[1] | ||
1879 | " Louis Pasteur develops an attenuated chicken cholera vaccine."[1] | ||
1883 | Russian zoologist Ilya Ilyich Mechnikov theorizes that cells are involved in the defense of the body.[1][2] | ||
1891 | Robert Koch discovers delayed type hypersensitivity.[1][2] | ||
1900 | Paul Ehrlich theorizes about some of the events taking place in immune cells, postulating that cells interact with toxins via "side chains" that stem from protoplasm. | ||
1902 | Charles Richet coins the term anaphylaxis to describe the most dangerous allergic reaction.[2] | ||
1906 | Clemens von Pirquet coins the term allergy.[1][2] | ||
1907 | Svante Arrhenius coins the term immunochemistry.[2] | ||
1910 | Henry Dale identifies histamine, a body chemical responsible for many allergic reactions. | ||
1916 | Robert Cook and Albert Vander Veer demonstrate the role of heredity in allergy sufferers. | ||
1921 | Carl Prausnitz and Heinz Küstner discover that components in the blood can reproduce food allergy reactions.[2] | ||
1926 | Lloyd D. Felton isolates pure antibody preparation. | ||
1934 | John Marrack advances the antigen-antibody binding hypothesis. | ||
1937 | David Bovet synthesizes the first antihistamine. | ||
1938 | "John Marrack formulates antigen-antibody binding hypothesis."[1] | ||
1940 | Karl Landsteiner and Alexander S. Weiner identify Rh antigens. | ||
1941 | Albert Coons develops immunofluorescence technique. | ||
1942 | "Jules Freund and Katherine McDermott research adjuvants."[1] | ||
1948 | Astrid Fagraeus demonstrates the production of antibodies in plasma B cells. | ||
1949 | " Macfarlane Burnet & Frank Fenner formulate immunological tolerance hypothesis."[1] | ||
1957 | " Alick Isaacs & Jean Lindemann discover interferon (cytokine)."[1] | ||
1959 | "Niels Jerne, David Talmage, Macfarlane Burnet develop clonal selection theory."[1] | ||
1962 | "Rodney Porter and team discovery the structure of antibodies."[1] | ||
1962 | "Jaques Miller and team discover thymus involvement in cellular immunity."[1] | ||
1962 | "Noel Warner and team distinguish between cellular and humoral immune responses."[1] | ||
1968 | " Anthony Davis and team discover T cell and B cell cooperation in immune response."[1] | ||
1974 | "Rolf Zinkernagel and Peter Doherty explore major histocompatibility complex restriction."[1] | ||
1985 | " Susumu Tonegawa, Leroy Hood, and team identify immunoglobulin genes."[1] | ||
1985 | "Scientists begin the rapid identification of genes for immune cells that continues to the present."[1] | ||
1987 | " Leroy Hood and team identify genes for the T cell receptor."[1] |
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The initial version of the timeline was written by FIXME.
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