Leonard Hayflick
Leonard Hayflick (May 20, 1928 – August 1, 2024) was an American anatomist who was Professor of
Anatomy at the
UCSF School of Medicine, and was Professor of Medical
Microbiology at
Stanford University School of Medicine. He was also past president of the
Gerontological Society of America and was a founding member of the council of the
National Institute on Aging (NIA). The recipient of a number of research prizes and awards, including the 1991 Sandoz Prize for Gerontological Research, he studied the
ageing process for more than fifty years. He is known for discovering that normal human
cells divide for a limited number of times ''in vitro'' (refuting the contention by
Alexis Carrel that normal body cells are
immortal). This is known as the
Hayflick limit. His discoveries overturned a 60-year old dogma that all cultured cells are immortal. Hayflick demonstrated that normal cells have a memory and can remember what doubling level they have reached. He demonstrated that his normal human cell strains were free from contaminating viruses. His cell strain
WI-38 soon replaced primary monkey kidney cells and became the substrate for the production of most of the world's human virus vaccines. Hayflick discovered that the etiological agent of primary
atypical pneumonia (also called "walking pneumonia") was not a virus as previously believed. He was the first to cultivate the causative organism called a
mycoplasma, the smallest free-living organism, which Hayflick isolated on a unique culture medium that bears his name. He named the organism ''
Mycoplasma pneumoniae''.
In 1959, Hayflick developed the first
inverted microscope for use in
cell culture research. To this day, all inverted microscopes used in cell culture laboratories worldwide are descended from this prototype. His microscope was accessioned by the
Smithsonian Institution in 2009.
Hayflick developed the first practical method for producing powdered cell culture media in 1965. This method is now used worldwide for the production of many tons of powdered media annually for use in research laboratories and commercial production facilities. The technique is not patented and Hayflick received no remuneration from this invention.
Hayflick was the author of the book, ''How and Why We Age'', published in August 1994 by
Ballantine Books, New York City and available since 1996 as a paperback. This book has been translated into nine languages and is published in
Brazil, the
Czech Republic,
Germany,
Hungary,
Israel,
Japan,
Poland,
Russia, and
Spain. It was a selection of the
Book of the Month Club and has sold over 50,000 copies worldwide.
Hayflick and his associates have vehemently condemned "anti-aging medicine" and criticized organizations such as the
American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine. Hayflick has written numerous articles criticizing both the feasibility and desirability of human
life extension, which have provoked responses critical of his views.
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