• In 1951, Gey's research assistant, Mary Kubicek, isolated cells from a cervical tumor removed by a surgeon found in a woman named Henrietta Lacks. (wikipedia.org)
  • The cells, known as HeLa cells, were taken from Lacks without her permission in 1951 while she was undergoing cervical cancer treatment at Johns Hopkins Hospital. (acs.org)
  • First discovered when Lacks was a patient at Johns Hopkins in 1951, the HeLa cells are a remarkably durable and prolific line of cells developed by Johns Hopkins researcher George Gey during Henrietta Lacks' treatment for cancer. (hopkinsmedicine.org)
  • More than 20 years after her death in 1951, her family finally learned the truth: that scientists had been using her cells for years, that people had made a lot of money from discoveries using those cells, and that they themselves never saw any of the profits. (tufts.edu)
  • That's why it was so significant in 1951 that this barrier was overcome for the first time, using cancer cells taken from a 31 year old African American woman named Henrietta Lacks. (nih.gov)
  • Henrietta Lacks was a poor African American woman whose tumor cells were collected without her knowledge just before her death in 1951. (withgoodreasonradio.org)
  • When Henrietta Lacks was diagnosed with cancer in 1951, doctors took her cells and grew them in test tubes. (oprah.com)
  • Henrietta Lacks was an African American woman whose cells were taken without her consent in 1951 and used for medical research. (somanybooksblog.com)
  • The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks tells the story of a poor resident of East Baltimore who contracted cervical cancer and was treated at Johns Hopkins Medical Center in 1951. (depauw.edu)
  • She was a poor black tobacco farmer whose cells-taken without her knowledge in 1951-became one of the most important tools in medicine, vital for developing the polio vaccine, cloning, gene mapping, in vitro fertilization, and more. (rebeccaskloot.com)
  • Hela cells are a type of cancerous cell line that was derived from a cervical cancer tumour in 1951. (helacells.com)
  • Henrietta Lacks is known as "immortal" for a reason-though she died of cervical cancer in 1951, scientists have used her extraordinary cells countless times since. (smithsonianmag.com)
  • On Monday, the family of the Black tobacco farmer, who died in 1951, filed a federal lawsuit accusing Massachusetts' most valuable company of unfairly profiting off her cells. (bostonglobe.com)
  • Lacks's cells were taken by Johns Hopkins University in 1951 during treatment of a cancerous tumor, and eventually used in medical research to create a cell line named after her, HeLa (pronounced hee-la). (bostonglobe.com)
  • The case involved cells derived from a cancerous cervical tumor in a woman who died from the disease in 1951. (nas.org)
  • Lacks' cells were harvested in 1951, when it was not illegal to do so without a patient's permission. (onmyway.com)
  • When Lacks' cervical cancer cells were successfully grown in a petri dish in 1951, scientists now had a source of cost-effective and easy-to-use cells that expanded their ability to conduct research. (onmyway.com)
  • Her cells have been used since 1951 to help scientists learn more about how human cells behave in the laboratory. (kathycorey.net)
  • The cells also serve as the foundation of "a multimillion-dollar industry that sells human biological materials," wrote journalist Rebecca Skloot on the cover of her 2010 best-selling book , which publicized Lacks's story. (acs.org)
  • After learning about the HeLa cell line in high school, Rebecca Skloot became consumed by curiosity about the woman behind the cells. (crownpublishing.com)
  • In an excerpt from her book, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks , Rebecca Skloot tells her story. (oprah.com)
  • Rebecca Skloot talks with Stephen Colbert about The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks , irony insurance, and little-known Centipede Cells. (rebeccaskloot.com)
  • If you are not familiar with the book (though probably most people are by now), it's the story of Henrietta Lacks and her family (as well as how Rebecca Skloot obtained Henrietta's story). (danahuff.net)
  • item_title" : "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks", "item_author" : [" Rebecca Skloot "], "item_description" : "#1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER - The story of modern medicine and bioethics--and, indeed, race relations--is refracted beautifully, and movingly. (booksamillion.com)
  • As Rebecca Skloot so brilliantly shows, the story of the Lacks family--past and present--is inextricably connected to the dark history of experimentation on African Americans, the birth of bioethics, and the legal battles over whether we control the stuff we are made of. (booksamillion.com)
  • Her cells "went up in the first space missions to see what would happen to human cells in zero gravity [and] helped with some of the most important advances in medicine: the polio vaccine, chemotherapy, cloning, gene mapping, in vitro fertilization," writes Rebecca Skloot in her best-selling book The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks . (smithsonianmag.com)
  • The extraordinary story of Henrietta and the way her family were treated was the subject of a book by Rebecca Skloot, and a 2017 Oprah Winfrey film giving much needed publicity to similar cases in which medical samples, taken without knowledge or consent, are subsequently used to the monetary benefit of others - often through patenting procedures unbeknownst to the owner of the sample. (scottishreview.net)
  • But the wider world didn't discover the extraordinary story until Rebecca Skloot wrote "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks," a gripping tale of ethics, race, and medicine. (bostonglobe.com)
  • A 2010 book by journalist Rebecca Skloot details how HeLa cells affected both science and the Lacks family. (onmyway.com)
  • For me personally, I found that Rebecca Skloot did a perfect job of weaving her story together, telling us the story of Henrietta and those she cared about, and giving us insights into the doctors, nurses and scientists who worked with the HeLa cells. (whimsyandparchment.com)
  • July 6, 1899 - November 8, 1970) was the cell biologist at Johns Hopkins Hospital who is credited with propagating the HeLa cell line from Henrietta Lacks' cervical tumor. (wikipedia.org)
  • The family of Henrietta Lacks has reached a settlement with Thermo Fisher Scientific, a science and technology services company that profited by selling Lacks's cells. (acs.org)
  • Although Lacks, a Black woman, died 8 months later, her "immortal" cells live on and have contributed to scientific breakthroughs including the development of polio and COVID-19 vaccines. (acs.org)
  • Thermo Fisher, for example, "has made staggering profits by using the HeLa cell line-all while Ms. Lacks' Estate and family haven't seen a dime," the lawsuit , filed in 2021, says. (acs.org)
  • They are called 'HeLa' cells from their initial host's name, Henrietta Lacks. (philosophynow.org)
  • So years passed, and the Lacks family remained completely unaware that these cells existed. (philosophynow.org)
  • A widening participation project centred around the story of Henrietta Lacks and HeLa cells. (biochemistry.org)
  • The firm was introduced by Dan Ford, vice dean for clinical investigation at the school of medicine during the 10th annual Henrietta Lacks Memorial Lecture, which honors the legacy of Mrs. Henrietta Lacks, whose cells have contributed to many medical advances, from development of the polio vaccine to the study of HPV, HIV/AIDS and leukemia. (hopkinsmedicine.org)
  • A sample of Lacks' cancer cells was retrieved during a biopsy and sent to Gey's nearby tissue lab, where he had been collecting cells from patients who came to The Johns Hopkins Hospital with cervical cancer. (hopkinsmedicine.org)
  • He discovered Lacks' cells were unlike any of the others he had seen: Where other cells would die, Lacks' cells survived, and the number of cells would double every 20 to 24 hours. (hopkinsmedicine.org)
  • The NIH committee tasked with overseeing the use of HeLa cells now includes two members of the Lacks family. (hopkinsmedicine.org)
  • It tells the rich, enthralling story of Henrietta Lacks, the forgotten woman behind one of the most important tools in modern medicine, and of Lacks's descendants, many of whom feel betrayed by the scientific establishment. (crownpublishing.com)
  • During the decade it took her to chase down and chronicle this remarkable story, she journeyed from state-of-the-art scientific laboratories to the tobacco fields of southern Virginia to East Baltimore, where the Lacks family lives today. (crownpublishing.com)
  • With this book, we too become immersed in the story of the Lacks family, and are shocked to discover that Henrietta's husband and children did not find out about her "immortality," or the enormous profits her cells had generated, until more than twenty years after her death, when scientists investigating HeLa began using blood samples from her family in research without informed consent. (crownpublishing.com)
  • Here, Skloot presents the reader with the story of Henrietta Lacks herself, as well as the results of race exploitation in scientific discovery. (tufts.edu)
  • The story of Henrietta Lacks is the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the history of exploiting African Americans for medical and scientific progress. (tufts.edu)
  • Her name was Henrietta Lacks, but scientists know her as HeLa. (worldcat.org)
  • Skloot is the author of the bestseller, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks , which tells the story of how the cells of a woman who died nearly 60 years ago have launched medical breakthroughs and raised serious questions about science, ethics, research, race, class and history. (depauw.edu)
  • Named "HeLa" (short for Henrietta Lacks), the first "immortal" human cells grown in culture are still alive today. (depauw.edu)
  • Rebecca encourages all institutions interested in having her speak to consider having the Lacks family join them either with Skloot or in her place, to tell their own story and answer questions about their experiences with HeLa cells, the book, and more. (rebeccaskloot.com)
  • CNN, " Henrietta Lacks: Her cells, her legacy ", on the continuing impact Henrietta's family is having on the world through their public speaking, activism, and work sharing the legacies of Henrietta and Deborah Lacks. (rebeccaskloot.com)
  • More than 70 years ago, Henrietta Lacks was being treated for cervical cancer when doctors took cells from her body without her consent. (wqln.org)
  • The family of Henrietta Lacks has now reached a settlement with one biotech company that used her cells. (wqln.org)
  • CHANG: You talk about how so many people have benefited from the taking of these cells from Henrietta Lacks, from her descendants. (wqln.org)
  • However, the story, in this case, is in the hands of a white woman who is no part of the Lacks family. (danahuff.net)
  • The cells are outside of the control of the family, and many argue that it's too hard to figure out how to compensate the Lacks family, who have struggled in poverty and often (ironically) without health insurance. (danahuff.net)
  • Anyone can order a vial of HeLa cells online, but the Lacks family receives no part of the profits on those sales. (danahuff.net)
  • narratives around the immortal HeLa cell line developed from the cervical cancer cells of Henrietta Lacks. (utexas.edu)
  • Dr. Wald sees the narratives about Henrietta Lacks and the HeLa cell line-particularly the racist language of contamination used to describe the cells themselves-as what she calls a "mythistory," a mythic belief or story shared by a collective that produces conventional narratives and sets of belief beneath the level of conscious thought. (utexas.edu)
  • Over the decade it took to uncover this story, Rebecca became enmeshed in the lives of the Lacks family--especially Henrietta's daughter Deborah. (booksamillion.com)
  • The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, starring Oprah Winfrey and Rose Byrne, is a powerful, gripping story that demands attention. (helacells.com)
  • It is based on the true story of Henrietta Lacks, an African-American woman whose cells have been used for medical research without her family's knowledge or consent. (helacells.com)
  • Henrietta Lacks was a real person-and her cancer cells have led to many medical discoveries. (smithsonianmag.com)
  • But the initial cells that started the immortal HeLa cell line were taken from Lacks without her consent or the knowledge of her family. (smithsonianmag.com)
  • Now, reports Andrea K. McDaniels for the Baltimore Sun , Lacks' family is demanding compensation from the university who first took the cells. (smithsonianmag.com)
  • Skloot helped draw attention to the once-untold story of Lacks and her family, who were not aware that her cells had been used at all until decades after her death. (smithsonianmag.com)
  • Lacks' family never received compensation for her cells, and many family members didn't understand just how her cells had been used. (smithsonianmag.com)
  • In a statement, the University says that there were no modern consent laws when they took Lacks' cells. (smithsonianmag.com)
  • The Lacks family, in turn, tells McDaniels that pharmaceutical corporations and other entities have profited from her cells and that they want the cells to be the property of her estate. (smithsonianmag.com)
  • Whether or not the Lacks family gets the compensation they think they deserve, the ongoing conversation about her cells is part of a larger debate about ethics, privacy and informed consent. (smithsonianmag.com)
  • It's been more than 60 years since Lacks' cells changed medicine forever-and her personal story is far from over. (smithsonianmag.com)
  • 1996 was a triumphant year in the Lacks family story. (shortform.com)
  • The BBC began filming a documentary about Henrietta and HeLa, and there was a doctor advocating for the recognition of Henrietta Lacks and her contribution to science. (shortform.com)
  • Jello still has plenty to rail about with inter-song screeds and did so with aplomb hitting topical issues such as the private prison industry, the war on drugs, and even a new song appropriately called "The Cell that Will Not Die" based on the story of Henrietta Lacks the source of the "HeLa" cell. (thesoundofindie.com)
  • The Lacks family who had lived through the years of the mid-20th century in deep poverty, had benefited little from the hugely successful and lucrative commercial exploitation of their mother's cells. (scottishreview.net)
  • In October 2021, the Lacks family initiated a legal claim for compensation against Thermo Fisher Scientific, citing the company's 'unjust enrichment' derived from their mother's cells, and on 1 August 2023 an announcement was made that the case had been successfully resolved in their favour, with a financial settlement having been agreed between the family and the pharmaceutical company. (scottishreview.net)
  • Ron Lacks, a 62-year-old grandson of Henrietta Lacks, said Tuesday that his mother learned that scientists had been using her mother-in-law's cells from a professor in the mid-1970s. (bostonglobe.com)
  • We've felt that everyone besides the Lacks family has been profiting off the HeLa cells," said Lacks, a retired Baltimore truck driver and executor of Henrietta Lacks's estate, who attended a news conference Monday outside US District Court in Baltimore after the suit was filed. (bostonglobe.com)
  • I think Henrietta's cells have touched everything in medical science," said Lacks, who wrote a book about his grandmother that was published a year ago. (bostonglobe.com)
  • In 2017 Ron Lacks's father, Lawrence Lacks, told the Baltimore Sun that he wanted compensation from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, where the cancerous cells from Henrietta Lacks's cervix were excised and cultured without her knowledge, and possibly other institutions for the unauthorized use of her cells. (bostonglobe.com)
  • The National Institutes of Health announced on August 7 that it had reached an agreement with members of the Lacks family that would give them rights over a widely used line of cultured cells. (nas.org)
  • Henrietta Lacks' cell line-known as HeLa cells-became and remain to this day a powerful tool for medical research. (nas.org)
  • She reconstructs what she can of the actual mortal life of Henrietta, mixes it with a memoir of her own quest to turn up the facts, adds in a bit of the scientific background, and gives generous space to the grievances of current members of the Lacks family, who generally feel disappointed that they didn't see any monetary benefit from the HeLa cells. (nas.org)
  • Lacks' cells (HeLa) have been used in life-saving treatments to treat and cure polio. (aamc.org)
  • More than 70 years after doctors at Johns Hopkins Hospital took Henrietta Lacks' cervical cells without her knowledge, a lawyer for her descendants said they have reached a settlement with a biotechnology company that they accused of reaping billions of dollars from a racist medical system. (onmyway.com)
  • The company unjustly enriched itself off Lacks' cells, the family argued in their lawsuit, filed in 2021. (onmyway.com)
  • Henrietta Lacks' story is also an ongoing bioethics case, because these cells were taken from her during a routine cervical cancer biopsy and were then given to researchers without her consent, as was common practice at the time. (onmyway.com)
  • The Lacks family has long attempted legal action against companies they say have unfairly benefited from Henrietta's cells. (onmyway.com)
  • Not only were the HeLa cells derived from Henrietta Lacks - the HeLa cells are Henrietta Lacks," Ben Crump, an attorney for the family, said during a news conference Tuesday. (onmyway.com)
  • On its website, Johns Hopkins University says that it never profited from Lacks' cells and that, though the collection and use of her cells was "an acceptable and legal practice in the 1950s, such a practice would not happen today without the patient's consent. (onmyway.com)
  • The astonishing story of Henrietta Lacks' immortal cells, taken without consent, revolutionized medical research but also exposed ethical dilemmas, leading to crucial changes in consent laws to protect patients' rights in the scientific community. (makematic.com)
  • But the cost to the Lacks' family can't be ignored and my heart ached for them as I read their story. (whimsyandparchment.com)
  • Find out more about Henrietta Lacks and why her cells are so important. (kathycorey.net)
  • Different strains of HeLa cells, all descended from that original sample, have been invaluable in a wide range of medical research ever since. (philosophynow.org)
  • A number of pharmaceutical marketing firms benefited hugely to the tune of billions of dollars over the decades by supplying modified strains of HeLa cells to researchers. (scottishreview.net)
  • Once Gey realized the longevity and hardiness of these cells which he called HeLa cells, he began sharing them with scientists all over the world, and the use of the HeLa cell line became widespread. (wikipedia.org)
  • By the time Gey published a short abstract claiming some credit for the development of the line, the cells were already being used by scientists all over the world. (wikipedia.org)
  • This unique property proved to be invaluable to scientists, as it allowed them to easily grow and study human cells in the lab. (acs.org)
  • And he and scientists around the world had been trying to grow human cells outside the body for decades, and it had never worked. (wqln.org)
  • That's how scientists learn how the virus got into cells and how to stop it. (wqln.org)
  • Henrietta's family did not learn of her immortality until more than twenty years after her death, when scientists investigating HeLa began using her husband and children in research without informed consent. (booksamillion.com)
  • Before HeLa cells, scientists wanted a way to grow and study human cells in the lab to conduct studies that are impossible to do in a living person. (onmyway.com)
  • In fact, an estimated 50 million metric tons of HeLa cells have been grown, with a combined weight, says Skloot, of the equivalent of more than 150 Empire State Buildings. (depauw.edu)
  • [Download Video: "Race and Cells" - 1728kb] "People didn't know that the cells had come from a black woman until the '70s, which is actually a really interesting part of the story," according to Skloot. (depauw.edu)
  • Skloot described the Tuskegee syphilis study, "Mississippi Appendectomies," and the lack of funding for sickle-cell anemia. (shortform.com)
  • The cells were used in the development of the polio vaccine, led to the first clone of a human cell, helped in the discovery that humans have 46 chromosomes, and were used to develop in vitro fertilization. (wikipedia.org)
  • HeLa cells went on to become a cornerstone of modern medicine, enabling countless scientific and medical innovations, including the development of the polio vaccine, genetic mapping and even COVID-19 vaccines. (onmyway.com)
  • If you could pile all HeLa cells ever grown onto a scale, they would weigh more than fifty million metric tons-more than a hundred Empire State Buildings. (crownpublishing.com)
  • One scientist estimates that if you could pile all the HeLa cells ever grown onto a scale, they'd weigh more than 50 million metric tons-the equivalent of at least 100 Empire State Buildings. (oprah.com)
  • The first 'immortal' human cells grown in culture, they are still alive today, though she has been dead for more than sixty years. (worldcat.org)
  • She was a poor Southern tobacco farmer who worked the same land as her slave ancestors, yet her cells--taken without her knowledge--became one of the most important tools in medicine: The first immortal human cells grown in culture, which are still alive today, though she has been dead for more than sixty years. (booksamillion.com)
  • His grandmother's cells were harvested and grown long before the advent of consent procedures used in medicine today. (bostonglobe.com)
  • From polio and COVID-19 vaccines to cancer research and sequencing the human genome, HeLa cells have played an enormous role in many scientific discoveries and advancements. (onmyway.com)
  • Made into an HBO movie by Oprah Winfrey and Alan Ball, this New York Times bestseller takes readers on an extraordinary journey, from the "colored" ward of Johns Hopkins Hospital in the 1950s to stark white laboratories with freezers filled with HeLa cells, from Henrietta's small, dying hometown of Clover, Virginia, to East Baltimore today, where her children and grandchildren live and struggle with the legacy of her cells. (rebeccaskloot.com)
  • Due to the unusual growth capabilities of the HeLa cell line, it also contaminated many cell cultures and ruined years of research, as discovered by Stanley Gartler in 1966. (wikipedia.org)
  • HeLa cells are an immortal line of human cervical cancer cells used in medical research. (philosophynow.org)
  • Should the law have given control of the cell line to Henrietta's family? (philosophynow.org)
  • Although many other cell lines are in use today, over the past several decades, the HeLa cell line has contributed to many medical breakthroughs. (hopkinsmedicine.org)
  • Even today, HeLa is the most widely used cell line in labs worldwide, bought and sold by the billions. (crownpublishing.com)
  • And for reasons that remained a mystery for many decades, her cells just took off, and they became what's known as the first immortal human cell line. (wqln.org)
  • The growth of this cell line, the way that we were treated, the fact that we were not given information, the fact that multiple generations of our family were used in research without their knowledge or consent, that's not OK. (wqln.org)
  • I mean, her cells were some of the first line of defense against COVID. (wqln.org)
  • Her cancer cells, known to science as HeLa, became the first immortal cell line. (danahuff.net)
  • I would argue she was not going to obtain the story without blurring that line, and it's also possible that family members would not have been able to tell the story without Skloot's interest and help. (danahuff.net)
  • This books definitely exposes interesting ethical issues in science and medicine, and it finally tells the story of the woman behind the HeLa cell line, and I think both stories needed to be told. (danahuff.net)
  • HEK293 cells, also known as human embryonic kidney 293 cells, are a type of cell line that was derived from human embryonic kidney tissue in the 1970s. (helacells.com)
  • It is important to carefully consider which cell line is most appropriate for a given research project. (helacells.com)
  • The university added: "Johns Hopkins never patented HeLa cells, and therefore does not own the rights to the HeLa cell line. (smithsonianmag.com)
  • It is the most prolific and widely used human cell line in biology, critical to the treatment of AIDS, hemophilia, influenza, leukemia, Parkinson's disease, and sickle cell disease, as well as the creation of the polio vaccine and research on the effects of zero gravity in outer space. (bostonglobe.com)
  • More than 100 corporations have profited from using the HeLa line, and Seeger said the estate plans to file several more claims in the next few weeks. (bostonglobe.com)
  • But lawyers for her family argued that Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc., of Waltham, Massachusetts, continued to commercialize the results long after the origins of the HeLa cell line became well known. (onmyway.com)
  • Multiphoton fluorescence image of HeLa cells stained with the actin binding toxin phalloidin (red), microtubules (cyan) and cell nuclei (blue). (nih.gov)
  • HeLa cell spheroid stained with Alexa Fluor 568 Phalloidin (Actin) and YOYO 1 iodide (Nucleus). (news-medical.net)
  • Though these "HeLa" cells launched a multimillion-dollar biomedical industry, her family was never compensated. (withgoodreasonradio.org)
  • And though the cells had launched a multimillion-dollar industry that sells human biological materials, her family never saw any of the profits. (booksamillion.com)
  • The cell samples were then sent to a cancer researcher at the hospital who discovered that, unlike most cells, they could be reproduced indefinitely in Petri dishes. (acs.org)
  • Henrietta's cancer cells unexpectedly did not die after a few hours - more the opposite: it was found that if nourished sufficiently they would survive and could be reproduced indefinitely. (philosophynow.org)
  • She died without knowing that her cells would become immortal -the first to grow and survive indefinitely in culture. (crownpublishing.com)
  • But Lacks's family was never compensated for the use of her cells. (acs.org)
  • Members of Henrietta Lacks's immediate family also travel extensively to speak about their story at universities and other institutions. (rebeccaskloot.com)
  • Henrietta Lacks's family, however, did not know about the research done with her cells, nor did they benefit monetarily from their use. (danahuff.net)
  • This book explores not only the story of Henrietta Lacks's contribution to science but also the ethical dilemma introduced by lack of informed consent, as well as racism and poverty. (danahuff.net)
  • Still, it's an important consideration in terms of what happened to Henrietta Lacks's cells. (danahuff.net)
  • The HeLa conference is still held every year, and he and his wife plan to purchase a marker for Henrietta Lacks's grave. (shortform.com)
  • Trillions of her cells have played a pivotal role in medical research for the past 60 years, but Henrietta Lacks's story was virtually unknown until it became the subject of a best-selling book in 2010 and an HBO movie starring Oprah Winfrey seven years later. (bostonglobe.com)
  • Her doctor excised tissue samples including both normal cells and cancer cells. (danahuff.net)
  • They can come from any type of tissue in the body, such as skin cells, muscle cells, nerve cells, etc. (helacells.com)
  • THUNDER Imagers allow to visualize clearly in real time details even deep inside thick samples of biologically relevant models like model organisms, tissue sections, and 3D cell cultures. (news-medical.net)
  • Tissue taken from the Black woman's tumor before she died of cervical cancer became the first human cells to continuously grow and reproduce in lab dishes. (onmyway.com)
  • So the environment, the Green New Deal, all these kind of things that are coming up now but have been written into a lot of these feminist science fiction stories for decades. (nowthenmagazine.com)
  • and finally, a beautiful account of the author's own journey, from her obsession with finding what or rather who "HeLa" standed for when she first encoutered HeLa cells, to becoming a part of Henrietta Lack's story. (vonlanthen.org)
  • Henrietta Lack's story has sparked a lot of interest in medical research and medical ethics. (kathycorey.net)
  • But her cells are still among the most widely used in labs worldwide-bought and sold by the billions. (oprah.com)
  • Samples were subsequently distributed widely to research laboratories and pharmaceutical firms, and the cells' properties gave rise to huge advances in cancer treatments, drug testing, vaccine developments, IVF and many other successful pioneering medical advances. (scottishreview.net)
  • Johns Hopkins says on its website that it "has never sold or profited from the discovery or distribution of HeLa cells" and that it offered them "freely and widely for scientific research. (bostonglobe.com)
  • This book tells the story of Dr. Paul Farmer, founder of the nonprofit organization, Partners In Health, and an infectious-disease specialist, who dedicates his life to caring for patients in the poorest and most under-resourced parts of the world. (aamc.org)
  • At the news conference Monday, Crump skewered Thermo Fisher for continuing to market products that use HeLa cells years after their origin had become well known. (bostonglobe.com)
  • Attorneys for Thermo Fisher Scientific said in an earlier court filing that only a "handful" of the many products that the company sells are "HeLa-related. (onmyway.com)
  • Cells from her tumour were sampled, labelled as 'HeLa' and, without her knowledge or consent, were sent to a research laboratory. (scottishreview.net)
  • Normal cells, on the other hand, are cells that are found in the body and are not cancerous. (helacells.com)
  • Her inadvertent legacy is that her uterine tumor cells proved to be the first human cells that kept growing and reliably reproducing in vitro. (nas.org)
  • Vincent Lotz asks who should have the decisive power over someone's cells after their death: their family, or the medical community? (philosophynow.org)
  • After her death, without the knowledge or permission of her family, the hospital's laboratory used it in a routine experiment they had been performing on every cell sample they received. (philosophynow.org)
  • At this point, when there was still comparatively little responsibility linked with HeLa cell use, it would surely have been right to inform her family and explain to them what this discovery meant to medicine and the pharmaceutical industry. (philosophynow.org)
  • The 1994 graduate remembers a time when he and other Black students staged a sit-in to protest the university's only form of recognition for Black History Month - a campus library display featuring the story of a white family that freed the people they had enslaved in a moment of guilt. (baltimoresun.com)
  • Her family didn't learn of her mother's unwitting contribution to science until the 1970s, never saw any of the profit gleaned from the research done on her cells, and were unable to afford health insurance. (depauw.edu)
  • Henrietta's cells have been bought and sold by the billions, yet she remains virtually unknown, and her family can't afford health insurance. (rebeccaskloot.com)
  • HeLa cells have benefited humanity tremendously, and a great deal of good has come from the research done with them, but very little consideration has ever been given to her family. (danahuff.net)
  • Why is it they have intellectual rights to her cells and can benefit billions of dollars when her family, her flesh and blood, her Black children get nothing? (bostonglobe.com)
  • It was 25 years before the Lack's family knew about the use of Henrietta's cells. (kathycorey.net)
  • The cells, as it turned out, could float on dust particles and could be transferred on unwashed hands or used pipettes, and therefore end up in other cell cultures. (wikipedia.org)
  • He was also one of the few African-American students that studied under the doctor that responsible for the spread of HeLa cell cultures. (shortform.com)
  • HeLa cells, as they are called, were essential in developing the polio vaccine. (crownpublishing.com)
  • Because the cells were so pervasive, just one could lead to the complete takeover of a culture. (wikipedia.org)
  • Gey and his wife developed their own cell culture medium which would preserve cell lines, but their greatest obstacle was contamination. (wikipedia.org)
  • Their cell culture recipe was constantly changing and being modified, but one recipe contained unusual ingredients such as chicken blood and cow fetuses. (wikipedia.org)
  • 1] Learn all about cell confluency and why it matters [2] and explore the critical components of cell culture media. (tunein.com)
  • THUNDER Imager for 3D Cell Culture & 3D Live Cell are designed for imaging of cell culture assays. (news-medical.net)
  • We're sharing a little about each Tigerlily ANGEL Advocate, their story, and why they decided to participate in SABCS 2021. (tigerlilyfoundation.org)
  • Those cells led to breakthroughs in everything from Parkinson's to polio. (oprah.com)
  • The study of HeLa cells have attributed significantly to the success of the polio vaccine and many other medical breakthroughs. (kathycorey.net)
  • It is outrageous that this company would think that they have intellectual rights property to their grandmother's cells," Crump said, according to an Associated Press account. (bostonglobe.com)
  • The remarkably resilient cells became the first human cells to be cultured continuously for experiments. (philosophynow.org)
  • One of the first things a biomedical researcher learns is that it's very hard to grow most human cells in the lab for an extended period. (nih.gov)
  • They went up in the first space missions to see what would happen to human cells in zero gravity. (wqln.org)
  • There they were discovered to have the most amazing property of rapid reproduction outside the human body - something which had never been found in human cells before. (scottishreview.net)
  • Though those cells have done wonders for science, Henrietta-whose legacy involves the birth of bioethics and the grim history of experimentation on African-Americans-is all but forgotten. (oprah.com)
  • Since 2001 alone, five Nobel Prizes have been awarded for research involving HeLa cells. (oprah.com)
  • We have stem cell research because we learned how to grow cells outside the body using her cells, the HPV vaccine, the COVID vaccine. (wqln.org)
  • Hela cells and HEK293 cells are two types of cell lines that are commonly used in scientific research. (helacells.com)
  • Hela cells are often used in research on cancer, genetics, and cell biology. (helacells.com)
  • HEK293 cells are often used in research on gene expression, protein production, and the development of new drugs. (helacells.com)
  • While both Hela cells and HEK293 cells are useful tools in scientific research, they have different properties and are used for different purposes. (helacells.com)
  • Currently unique to the market, the new technology deployed in THUNDER Imagers makes visualization and analysis of large volume, thick specimens ideal for many biomedical applications where they are required, including regenerative medicine, cancer, and stem cell research to decode 3D biology in real time. (news-medical.net)
  • Clearly the HeLa cells are a tribute to humanity's ingenuity, they've enabled an incredible amount of research and advancement. (whimsyandparchment.com)
  • The story of Henrietta and of the HeLa cells , taken without her knowledge or consent, still fascinates experts and laymen. (ipos-society.org)
  • She was a poor Southern tobacco farmer, yet her cells--taken without her knowledge--became one of the most important tools in medicine. (worldcat.org)
  • A few of the medical advances achieved through the TCA include the clone growth of rodent cells, the development of time lapse cinematography, and the electron microscopic examination of cell structures. (wikipedia.org)
  • Can you talk about how and why these cells have been called a medical revolution? (wqln.org)
  • They're really - so much of what we know of as modern-day medical science can be traced back to her cells. (wqln.org)
  • HeLa cells, which never stop dividing, have played a part in some of the most significant modern medical discoveries. (smithsonianmag.com)
  • The doctors who treated her took a sample of her cancer cells. (philosophynow.org)
  • She died pretty soon after because her cancer was incredibly aggressive, which is part of why her cells grew. (wqln.org)
  • He organized the inaugural HeLa Cancer Control Symposium. (shortform.com)
  • She talks about stories written and authored by women - but we can expand that to non-binary and trans and queer perspectives - being a gathering of things that are around you. (nowthenmagazine.com)
  • What Ursula Le Guin talks about is stories building on themselves, and being this continuous form of narrative. (nowthenmagazine.com)
  • When HeLa cells were first cultured, no one really knew the potential they had, not even the researchers. (philosophynow.org)
  • Soon after that, he began sharing the cells, at no cost, with researchers around the world. (hopkinsmedicine.org)
  • Here you had a time period, the '50s, where black people could not go into restaurants, they couldn't use the same bathrooms and water fountains as white people, yet this one black woman's cells were being used to develop the polio vaccine, which saved millions of white people's lives. (depauw.edu)
  • Because her cells exist - I mean, it's just - it really is sort of impossible to tease out all the ways that her cells impact people's lives every day. (wqln.org)
  • I love reading about people's stories. (danahuff.net)
  • When naming the most important stories of the 20th century, gossip writer Liz Smith rattled off the assassination of JFK, the Lindbergh kidnapping, and the love affair between Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton. (withgoodreasonradio.org)
  • Life Stories in Literature. (notesinthemargin.org)
  • 10 years later after much effort, she released " Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption ," about the life of Louis Zamperini, a former Olympic distance runner and bombardier. (kathycorey.net)
  • Through years of fundraising Gey was able to raise the millions of dollars needed to open the permanent home for the TCA, W. Alton Jones Cell Science Center at Lake Placid, New York. (wikipedia.org)
  • She spent years winning the trust of Henrietta's daughter Deborah, who longed to know more about her mother and to better understand the science behind her cells, which often seemed more like science fiction. (crownpublishing.com)
  • They were taking them from anyone they could get their hands on, basically, for years, and the cells always died. (depauw.edu)
  • You know, the sort of greatest hits of the early years of her cells were that they were used to create the polio vaccine. (wqln.org)
  • In fact, once removed from the human body, most cells will either die immediately or reproduce only a limited number of times. (nih.gov)