青蒿素的发现

来源 :英语学习·教师版 | 被引量 : 0次 | 上传用户:wxj3177
下载到本地 , 更方便阅读
声明 : 本文档内容版权归属内容提供方 , 如果您对本文有版权争议 , 可与客服联系进行内容授权或下架
论文部分内容阅读
  本篇選自《学英语 讲中国故事——科技成就篇》,介绍了中国中医科学院终身研究员、国家最高科学技术奖获得者、诺贝尔生理学或医学奖获得者屠呦呦发现青蒿素的过程。青蒿素的发现为世界带来了一种全新的抗疟药。古往今来,中国的科技成就在人类历史上书写了浓墨重彩的一笔。无论是蕴含中国智慧的古代科学成就,还是体现自主创新的现代科技成就,中国灿烂辉煌的科技文明在世界具有不可磨灭的深刻影响。了解中国的科技成就,不仅可以更好地洞悉中国的历史和文化,更能激励我们学习科学家勇于探索、敢于钻研的精神。



  Born in Ningbo, Zhejiang in 1930, Tu Youyou has a very lovely name. According to an interview after being awarded the 2011 Lasker-DeBakey Clinical Medical Research Award, Youyou was given by her father, who adapted it from a sentence of The Book of Songs (诗经 ) “Deer bleat‘youyou’ while they are eating the wild herb named Hao” (“ 呦呦鹿鸣 , 食野之蒿 ”). It is this interesting coincidence that links Youyou’s whole life with qinghao (青蒿 ).

Early Life and Education


  Before transferring to Ningbo Xiaoshi High School in 1948, Tu Youyou attended a junior high school. From 1951 to 1955, she attended Peking University Medical School (Beijing Medical College). Tu studied at the Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, and graduated in 1955. Later, Tu was trained for two and a half years in traditional Chinese medicine. Ever since, Tu has worked at the Academy of Traditional Chinese Medicine in Beijing.

Awards and Research Career


  Sitting at home watching TV, 85-yearold Tu Youyou, knew she had won the prize.“It’s nothing special. It’s just something unexpected, but not very unexpected,” she said quietly. “It’s not my honor. It’s the honor of all Chinese scientists.”
  A few words from Tu put the time back to that special historical period. In 1967, a national scientific research institution made up of more than 60 scientific research groups and more than 500 scientific researchers quietly started a special mission, codenamed “523”, aiming to help the north Vietnamese government study a malaria2 drug, because the parasite3 has already developed resistance to quinine4.
  Tu was one of the 500 scientists from more than 60 units across the country who took part in the secret military research mission. The greyhaired Tu remembered clearly that the research work she was involved in was a “joint project between the army and the people”.
  In 1969, Tu Youyou, then a junior researcher, was appointed as the team leader of Project “523”. Tu was 39 years old at that time, holding the belief that“traditional Chinese medicine is a great treasure house, which should be explored and improved” and set about discovering new antimalarial drugs from Chinese herbal medicines. She looked through numerous ancient medical books and folk medicine for possible prescription. For several years, she interviewed almost all the old traditional Chinese medicine researchers in the south of China.   It was under such circumstances that artemisia annua entered Tu’s vision. This herb was recorded as medicine in ancient Chinese medical books 2,000 years ago. However, in the first round of drug filtrating and testing, the inhibition5 rate of artemisia annua was only 68 percent, less than that of pepper. The effect of artemisia annua is not the best of the data collected by other scientific research units in the “523” office. In a certain period of drug filtrating6 and testing, artemisia annua had an antimalarial effect of only 12 percent. Therefore, for quite a long time, artemisia annua has not attracted much attention.
  Tu was not satisfied and thought over and over again. “Temperature! The difference is temperature! It is likely that at high temperatures, the active ingredients are destroyed.” On October 4, 1971, her experiments with artemisia annua and temperature trials began. After 190 failures, Tu Youyou’s research group found artemisia annua extract with 100 percent antimalarial effect in the 191st trial.



  In 1972, the results were taken seriously, and researchers made artemisinin, an effective antimalarial ingredient, from the extract, which has since been widely used.
  Tu also studied the chemical structure and pharmacology7 of artemisinin. Furthermore, Tu volunteered to be the first human subject. It proved to be safe, so she conducted successful clinical trials with human patients. In 1981, she presented the findings relating to artemisinin at a meeting with the World Health Organization. For her work on malaria, she was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine on October 5, 2015.

Significance of the Discovery


  “Artemisinin — a gift from traditional Chinese medicine to the world,” this quickly became known to the world after Tu won a Nobel Prize. After winning the Nobel Prize, a number of well-known western universities invited Tu to participate in scientific research, awarded her various titles such as“honorary doctor”, and even the contents of traditional Chinese medicine appeared for the first time in classic western medicine textbooks.
  The “Tu Youyou effect” is a“heart booster8” for Chinese scientific and technological circles, especially those engaged in traditional Chinese medicine. It proves that the original scientific achievements in China can also win the Nobel Prize, which is a great encouragement to China’s confidence in science and technology.
  Notes
  1. artemisinin n. 青蒿素
  2. malaria n. < 醫 > 疟疾
  3. parasite n. 寄生物;寄生虫
  4. quinine n. 奎宁(化学称为金鸡纳碱)
  5. inhibition n. 抑制;压抑;禁止
  6. filtrate v. 筛选;过滤
  7. pharmacology n. 药理学;药物学
  8. heart booster 强心针
其他文献
随着我国经济的快速发展,我国对电石的需求越来越大,然而传统的电石生产工艺和设备耗能极大且产量较低,我国贫油富煤的基本能源结构,鉴于此,探索新型反应器对煤液化制取电石将成为
会议
博落回[Macleaya cordata (Willd.)R. Br.],为罂粟科博落回属植物博落回种植物,博落回药材具有清热解毒、跌打损伤、治疗皮肤病、杀虫止痒及抗菌抗肿瘤等功效。博落回中的化学成分主要为生物碱类。为寻找活性部位和活性化学成分,以博落回杀虫抑菌活性为指导,采用多种现代分离技术(硅胶柱层析,凝胶色谱法和半制备HPLC等)对博落回石油醚、乙酸乙酯和正丁醇萃取部位进行分离,从博落回根中