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NYSTATIN COMES FROM SOIL

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Lee Hazen

Born August 24, 1885 - Died June 24, 1975

Fuller Brown

Born November 23, 1898 - Died January 14, 1980

Nystatin and Method of Producing It

Patent No. 2,797, 183

Inducted 1994

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The world's first useful antifungal antibiotic, nystatin, was developed through

a long-distance scientific collaboration. Working as researchers for the New

York State Department of Health, Lee Hazen in New York City and

Fuller Brown in Albany shared tests and samples through the U.S. mail. To

Hazen's single-minded pursuit of an antifungal antibiotic, Brown added the

skills needed to identify, characterize, and purify the various substances

produced by culturing bacteria found in hundreds of soil samples. The antibiotic

they developed, named 'nystatin' for the New York State Department of Health,

was first introduced in practical form in 1954 following Food and Drug

Administration approval. Not only did it cure many disfiguring and disabling

fungal infections of the skin, mouth, throat, and intestinal tract, but it could

be combined with antibacterial drugs to balance their effects. Uses for nystatin

have been as varied as treating Dutch elm disease to rescuing water-damaged

works of art from molds. Brown and Hazen donated all nystatin royalties-more

than $13 million by the time the patent expired-to academic science through the

nonprofit Research Corporation. Born in rural Mississippi, Hazen was orphaned at

the age of three and raised by relatives. She earned a B.S. at the Mississippi

State College for Women then taught school and served as an Army diagnostic

laboratory technician during World War I. After the war she won an advanced

degree in bacteriology from Columbia University, becoming one of its first women

doctoral candidates. Brown was born in Springfield, Massachusetts. She received

her undergraduate education at Mount Holyoke College and later earned M.A. and

Ph.D. degrees in chemistry from the University of Chicago. She became a pioneer

in encouraging women to study science.

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For more on women inventors and scientist:

Women Inventor Museum

Contributions of 20th Century Women in Physics

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