Tikvah Alper (22 January 1909 – 2 February 1995) trained as a physicist and became a distinguished radiobiologist.
Among many other initiatives and discoveries, she was among the first to find evidence indicating that the
infectious agent in
Scrapie does not contain
nucleic acid
Nucleic acids are biopolymers, macromolecules, essential to all known forms of life. They are composed of nucleotides, which are the monomers made of three components: a 5-carbon sugar, a phosphate group and a nitrogenous base. The two main cl ...
: a finding that was instrumental in understanding the development of the
Prion
Prions are misfolded proteins that have the ability to transmit their misfolded shape onto normal variants of the same protein. They characterize several fatal and transmissible neurodegenerative diseases in humans and many other animals. It ...
theory. She was director of the MRC Experimental Radiopathology Unit,
Hammersmith Hospital, London, UK, 1962–1974.
She married Max Sterne but never adopted his name.
Early life and career
Tikvah Alper was born in South Africa, the youngest of four daughters in a family of Jewish refugees from Russia.
As a schoolgirl at
Durban Girls' High School
Durban Girls' High School (known to the students of the school as DGHS) is a public high school for girls located in Glenwood, a suburb of Durban, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. It was founded in 1882 and is home to over 1200 students.
Nose-stu ...
, she was described as "the most intellectually distinguished girl ever to attend the school",
and matriculated with distinction a year early. She graduated with distinction in physics from
University of Cape Town in 1929, and then studied in Berlin with the nuclear physicist
Lise Meitner
Elise Meitner ( , ; 7 November 1878 – 27 October 1968) was an Austrian-Swedish physicist who was one of those responsible for the discovery of the element protactinium and nuclear fission. While working at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute on rad ...
in 1930–32, publishing a prize-winning
paper on
delta rays produced by
alpha particles
Alpha particles, also called alpha rays or alpha radiation, consist of two protons and two neutrons bound together into a particle identical to a helium-4 nucleus. They are generally produced in the process of alpha decay, but may also be produce ...
in 1933.
In 1932, she returned to South Africa to marry the (later) renowned bacteriologist Max Sterne, the inventor of the
most effective livestock vaccine for anthrax. Because married women were not then permitted to work at University, Tikvah and Max established a home laboratory where they worked together. Their sons, Jonathan and Michael, were born in 1935 and 1936. From then on, Tikvah Alper combined demands of motherhood (Jonathan was born profoundly deaf), marriage and career. These included pre- and post-war spells in England, where she worked with the pioneer radiobiologist, Douglas Lea. Over ten years from 1937, Tikvah retrained and then also worked as a
teacher of the deaf
Deaf education is the education of students with any degree of hearing loss or deafness. This may involve, but does not always, individually-planned, systematically-monitored teaching methods, adaptive materials, accessible settings, and othe ...
. Her physics training and technical skills were evident in her published research on making speech articulation visible, for use in speech training for deaf children
She became head of the Biophysics section of the South African National Physics Laboratory in 1948.
Later career
Despite their growing scientific renown, in 1951, Max Sterne and Tikvah Alper were forced to leave South Africa because of their outspoken opposition to
apartheid. Tikvah found an (unpaid) research post at the MRC Radiobiology Laboratories at the Hammersmith Hospital, London, directed by
Hal Gray, whom she had met on earlier visits. Here, work focussed on the mechanisms of the effects of radiation on cell biology. The complexities of the effects of radiation on different cell types, and their interaction with other physiological and chemical processes began to be mapped out at this time, and continued through the 1950s and 60s. She was Director of the Radiobiology Unit from 1962 until her retirement in 1974. Her classic text ''Cellular Radiobiology'' was published in 1979. Tikvah Alper continued an active professional life in retirement, culminating in a "brilliant lecture to the Radiation Research Society in Dallas, USA at the age of 83..".
[Alper, T (1993) The Scrapie Enigma: insights from radiation experiments Radiation Research 135, 283–92] She died in
Sarisbury, Hampshire, England, in 1995,
and was survived by her husband Max, sons Jonathan and Michael, six grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren.
Alper's role in identifying the infectious agent in Scrapie
Scrapie is a fatal infectious disease of the neural system of sheep; one of a class of
brain diseases that can affect
cattle (BSE) and humans (Kuru, nCJD). Scrapie had been thought to be caused by a 'slow virus' – one that could take years to show as a change in behaviour or movement. By the mid-1960s, it was established that cells could only replicate via
DNA. Radioactivity stops cell replication by 'killing' DNA. Alper found that radiation did not kill the infective agent in scrapie, suggesting that a virus was unlikely to be the infective agent. The infective agent had to be smaller and simpler than (viral) DNA. Alper also found that the agent remained active under ultraviolet light. DNA is inactive under UV light. Instead, the agent was killed by light at 237 nm, a wavelength specific to polysaccharide inactivation. Alper and colleagues
reported these properties of the scrapie agent – a finding that was greeted with astonishment in many quarters, for it appeared to contravene the
central dogma
The central dogma of molecular biology is an explanation of the flow of genetic information within a biological system. It is often stated as "DNA makes RNA, and RNA makes protein", although this is not its original meaning. It was first stated by ...
that holds that replication (and hence the growth of the disease and its infectious properties) can only proceed via DNA. However, once these empirical findings were accepted, several theories developed to accommodate the peculiar properties of the scrapie agent. The most widely accepted theory today is the
prion
Prions are misfolded proteins that have the ability to transmit their misfolded shape onto normal variants of the same protein. They characterize several fatal and transmissible neurodegenerative diseases in humans and many other animals. It ...
theory, which posits a 'rogue' protein as the infectious source. However, Alper could not accept that a protein 'mutation' was the agent. Firstly, her UV radiation studies did not indicate a protein agent and, secondly, isolated prions did not induce scrapie. Her own theories concerning the agent were developed in the last years of her life and suggested a more dynamic and complex story.
See also
*
Timeline of women in science
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Alper, Tikvah
1909 births
1995 deaths
Radiobiologists
Women radiobiologists
South African women scientists
British women biologists
South African Jews
20th-century South African physicists
20th-century British women scientists
20th-century British biologists
People from Cape Town
University of Cape Town alumni
Alumni of Durban Girls' High School
South African people of Russian-Jewish descent
South African emigrants to the United Kingdom