1951: Where It All Begins
Henrietta Lacks, a 31-year old African-American woman, seeks treatment for cervical cancer at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland. During her treatment, cells from her tumor are taken. These cells will come to be known as “HeLa” cells, taken from the first two letters of Henrietta’s Lacks’ first and last name.
Historical Event
1952: Establishing HeLa Cells
HeLa cells grow continuously in a laboratory for the first time. Over the next 60+ years, thousands of scientists will author over 110,000 research publications involving HeLa cells.
Historical Event
1956: Developing Cancer Research Methods
HeLa cells are used by
scientists to develop a cancer research method that tests whether a cell line is cancerous or not. This method proves so reliable that scientists use it to this day.
Cancer Research and Basic Research Methodology
1964: Going to Outer Space
1964: Shedding Light on Treatments for Blood Disorders
HeLa cells are used
to study the potential treatment benefits of a drug called Hydroxyurea against certain blood cancers and sickle cell anemia. Scientists note that when Hydroxyurea is applied to cancerous cells, cancer growth slows down. It is also shown that Hydroxyurea helps prevent the mis-shaping of red blood cells caused by the genetic mutation responsible for sickle cell anemia. Today, Hydroxyurea is an approved treatment for certain blood cancers and sickle cell anemia.
Cancer Research and Basic Research Methodology
1988: Advancing Understanding of HIV Infection
In the early days of the HIV-AIDS epidemic, scientists
discover that HeLa cells are not easily infected by HIV. Using this information, researchers gain important basic understanding of how HIV infection works. This knowledge later facilitates drug development aimed at limiting the spread of HIV.
Molecular Biology and Genetics
1993: Exploring How Tuberculosis Makes People Sick
Scientists use HeLa cells
to see for the first-time, at the molecular level, how tuberculosis makes people sick. Tuberculosis has caused disease since ancient times and is thought to infect 25% of the world’s population. The discovery of how this disease works provides vital information for the potential development of treatments and more effective vaccines.
Molecular Biology and Genetics
2001: Innovating Single Cell Imaging
Scientists use HeLa cells
to develop a new and innovative single cell microscopic imaging method. This method allows scientists to see the mechanism by which viruses enter cells and allows for the clearest view of the inner workings of a living cell. This groundbreaking approach leads to a 2014 Nobel Prize for Dr. Eric Betzig, Dr. Stefan W. Hell, and Dr. William E. Moerner (see entry below for more information).
Cancer Research and Basic Research Methodology
2008: Dr. Harald Zur Hausen Wins the Nobel Prize for Showing Viruses Can Cause Certain Cancers
The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine is awarded to Dr. Harald zur Hausen. Dr. zur Hausen’s
work using human papilloma viruses-infected HeLa cells demonstrates that certain types of viruses can cause cancer. Dr. zur Hausen’s groundbreaking research is one of the first studies to definitively show that viruses can cause certain types of cancer. His discovery also leads to the development of a vaccine against cervical cancer, which is the second most common cancer in women.
Nobel Prize