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  1. Jean Joseph Henri Toussaint (30 April 1847 – 3 August 1890) was a French veterinarian born in Rouvres-la-Chétive, department of Vosges . In 1869 he received his diploma from the school of veterinary medicine in Lyon.

  2. The following 2 files are in this category, out of 2 total. Henry Toussaint par Louis Georges Neumann.jpg 500 × 637; 255 KB. JJHToussaint.png 475 × 520; 431 KB. Categories: Toussaint (surname) Jean (given name) Joseph (given name) Henri (given name) 1847 births. 1890 deaths. Knights of the Legion of Honour. Veterinarians from France.

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    Awareness of Edward Jenner’s pioneering studies of smallpox vaccination (Milestone 2) led Louis Pasteur (1822–1895) to propose that vaccines could be found for all virulent diseases.

    Pasteur began to study chicken cholera in 1877 and by the following year had succeeded in culturing the causative organism, Pasteurella multocida. In 1879, Pasteur discovered by chance that cultures of this bacterium gradually lost their virulence over time. Before leaving to go on a holiday, Pasteur had instructed an assistant to inject the latest batch of chickens with fresh cultures of P. multocida. The assistant forgot to do this, however, and then himself went on holiday. On his return, Pasteur’s assistant inoculated the chickens with the cultures, which by this time had been left in the laboratory for a month, stoppered only with a cotton-wool plug. The inoculated chickens developed mild symptoms but recovered fully.

    Another scientist might have concluded that the cultures had (mostly) died, but Pasteur was intrigued. He injected the recovered chickens with freshly cultured cholera bacteria. When the birds remained healthy, Pasteur reasoned that exposure to oxygen had caused the loss of virulence. He found that sealed bacterial cultures maintained their virulence, whereas those exposed to air for differing periods of time before inoculation showed a predictable decline in virulence. He named this progressive loss of virulence ‘attenuation’, a term still in use today.

    Pasteur, along with Charles Chamberland and Emile Roux, went on to develop a live attenuated vaccine for anthrax. Unlike cultures of the chicken cholera bacterium, Bacillus anthracis cultures exposed to air readily formed spores that remained highly virulent irrespective of culture duration; indeed, Pasteur reported that anthrax spores isolated from soil where animals that died of anthrax had been buried 12 years previously remained as virulent as fresh cultures. However, Pasteur discovered that anthrax cultures would grow readily at a temperature of 42–43 °C but were then unable to form spores. These non-sporulating cultures could be maintained at 42–43 °C for 4–6 weeks but exhibited a marked decline in virulence over this period when inoculated into animals.

    Accordingly, in public experiments at Pouilly-le-Fort, France, conducted under a media spotlight reminiscent of that on today’s COVID-19 treatment trials, 24 sheep, 1 goat and 6 cows were inoculated twice with Pasteur’s anthrax vaccine, on 5 and 17 May 1881. A control group of 24 sheep, 1 goat and 4 cows remained unvaccinated. On 31 May all the animals were inoculated with freshly isolated anthrax bacilli, and the results were examined on 2 June. All vaccinated animals remained healthy. The unvaccinated sheep and goats had all died by the end of the day, and all the unvaccinated cows were showing anthrax symptoms. Chamberland’s private laboratory notebooks, however, showed that the anthrax vaccine used in these public experiments had actually been attenuated by potassium dichromate, using a process similar to that developed by Pasteur’s competitor, Jean Joseph Henri Toussaint.

    •Nature Milestones in Vaccines: Interactive Timeline

    •An address on vaccination in relation to chicken cholera and splenic fever. (Pasteur, L., 1881)

    • Caroline Barranco
    • 2020
  4. Jun 22, 2021 · 2 Jean Joseph Henri Toussaint (1847–1890) was a French bacteriologist contemporary of Pasteur and worked on various infectious diseases like chicken cholera and tuberculosis. He is credited with the development of the first anthrax vaccine via chemical inactivation but during his lifetime only Pasteur received full recognition.

    • Veysel Kayser, Iqbal Ramzan
    • 2021
  5. Veterinarian. Jean Joseph Henri Toussaint was a French veterinarian born in Rouvres-la-Chétive, department of Vosges. Career. In 1869 he received his diploma from the school of veterinary medicine in Lyon. In 1876 he was appointed professor of anatomy, physiology and zoology at the school of veterinary medicine in Toulouse.

  6. Jean-Joseph-Henri Toussaint produced an anthrax vaccine in 1880, an invention for which Pasteur later claimed credit. Neither vaccine, however, was used on humans. This changed when Pasteur developed a rabies vaccine after long experiments with attenuation.

  7. Advertisement. In 1880, Pasteur reported experiments on chicken cholera, which Jean Joseph Henri Toussaint had earlier isolated. Pasteur found that using certain culture techniques, it was...

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