Pearson Solutions
Close windowBack to Pearson
From Information Please Back to Fact Monster Home Page
Encyclopedia

Fleming, Sir Alexander

Fleming, Sir Alexander, 18811955, Scottish bacteriologist, discoverer of penicillin (1928) and lysozyme (1922), an antibacterial substance found in saliva and other body secretions. Educated at St. Mary's Hospital Medical School, Univ. of London, where he later became professor of bacteriology, he published many articles on bacteriology, immunology, and chemotherapy. He shared the 1945 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Ernst B. Chain and Sir Howard W. Florey for work on penicillin. Fleming was knighted in 1944.

See biography by G. MacFarlane (1985).

The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.

More on Sir Alexander Fleming from Fact Monster:

  • Howard Walter Florey - Florey, Howard Walter Florey, Howard Walter (Baron Florey of Adelaide), 1898–1968, British ...
  • John C. Sheehan - John C. Sheehan Born: 1915 Birthplace: Battle Creek, Mich. Semi-synthetic penicillin—For ...
  • Ernst Boris Chain - Chain, Ernst Boris Chain, Ernst Boris, 1906–79, English biochemist, b. Berlin, Germany. In ...
  • BIOTECHNOLOGY - The use of microbes (micro-organisms) to produce and process materials is called biotechnology. Bacteria and yeasts are used to produce products, such
  • penicillin - penicillin penicillin, any of a group of chemically similar substances obtained from molds of the ...

See more Encyclopedia articles on: Medicine: Biographies

Link to Fact Monster | Add Fact Monster search to your site | Awards and Press
Contact Fact Monster | Advertise with Fact Monster | Rights | Privacy | Terms of Use
Brought to you by: Information Please
© 2000–2007 Pearson Education, publishing as Fact Monster