in his laboratory in 1921
Louis Pasteur was unable to find a causative agent for
rabies and speculated about a pathogen too small to be detected by microscopes. In 1884, the French
microbiologist Charles Chamberland invented the
Chamberland filter (or Pasteur-Chamberland filter) with pores small enough to remove all bacteria from a solution passed through it. In 1892, the Russian biologist
Dmitri Ivanovsky used this filter to study what is now known as the
tobacco mosaic virus: crushed leaf extracts from infected tobacco plants remained infectious even after filtration to remove bacteria. Ivanovsky suggested the infection might be caused by a
toxin produced by bacteria, but he did not pursue the idea. At the time it was thought that all infectious agents could be retained by filters and grown on a nutrient medium—this was part of the
germ theory of disease. In 1898, the Dutch microbiologist
Martinus Beijerinck repeated the experiments and became convinced that the filtered solution contained a new form of infectious agent. He observed that the agent multiplied only in cells that were dividing, but as his experiments did not show that it was made of particles, he called it a
contagium vivum fluidum (soluble living germ) and reintroduced the word
virus. Beijerinck maintained that viruses were liquid in nature, a theory later discredited by
Wendell Stanley, who proved they were particulate. In the early 20th century, the English bacteriologist
Frederick Twort discovered a group of viruses that infect bacteria, now called
bacteriophages (or commonly 'phages'), in 1915. The French-Canadian microbiologist
Félix d'Herelle announced his independent discovery of bacteriophages in 1917. D'Herelle described viruses that, when added to bacteria on an
agar plate, would produce areas of dead bacteria. He accurately diluted a suspension of these viruses and discovered that the highest dilutions (lowest virus concentrations), rather than killing all the bacteria, formed discrete areas of dead organisms. Counting these areas and multiplying by the dilution factor allowed him to calculate the number of viruses in the original suspension. Phages were heralded as a potential treatment for diseases such as
typhoid and
cholera, but their promise was forgotten with the development of
penicillin. The development of
bacterial resistance to antibiotics has renewed interest in the therapeutic use of bacteriophages. By the end of the 19th century, viruses were defined in terms of their
infectivity, their ability to pass filters, and their requirement for living hosts. Viruses had been grown only in plants and animals. In 1906
Ross Granville Harrison invented a method for
growing tissue in
lymph, and in 1913 E. Steinhardt, C. Israeli, and R.A. Lambert used this method to grow
vaccinia virus in fragments of guinea pig corneal tissue. In 1928, H. B. Maitland and M. C. Maitland grew vaccinia virus in suspensions of minced hens' kidneys. Their method was not widely adopted until the 1950s when
poliovirus was grown on a large scale for vaccine production. Another breakthrough came in 1931 when the American pathologist
Ernest William Goodpasture and
Alice Miles Woodruff grew influenza and several other viruses in fertilised chicken eggs. In 1949,
John Franklin Enders,
Thomas Weller, and
Frederick Robbins grew poliovirus in cultured cells from aborted human embryonic tissue, the first virus to be grown without using solid animal tissue or eggs. This work enabled
Hilary Koprowski, and then
Jonas Salk, to make an effective
polio vaccine. The first images of viruses were obtained upon the invention of
electron microscopy in 1931 by the German engineers
Ernst Ruska and
Max Knoll. In 1935, American biochemist and virologist
Wendell Meredith Stanley examined the tobacco mosaic virus and found it was mostly made of protein. A short time later, this virus was separated into protein and RNA parts. The tobacco mosaic virus was the first to be
crystallised and its structure could, therefore, be elucidated in detail. The first
X-ray diffraction pictures of the crystallised virus were obtained by Bernal and Fankuchen in 1941. Based on her X-ray crystallographic pictures,
Rosalind Franklin discovered the full structure of the virus in 1955. In the same year,
Heinz Fraenkel-Conrat and
Robley Williams showed that purified tobacco mosaic virus RNA and its protein coat can assemble by themselves to form functional viruses, suggesting that this simple mechanism was probably the means through which viruses were created within their host cells. The second half of the 20th century was the golden age of virus discovery, and most of the documented species of animal, plant, and bacterial viruses were discovered during these years. In 1946,
bovine viral diarrhoea (a
pestivirus) was first described. In 1957
equine arterivirus was discovered. In 1963 the
hepatitis B virus was discovered by
Baruch Blumberg. In 1965
Howard Temin described the first
retrovirus.
Reverse transcriptase, the
enzyme that retroviruses use to make DNA copies of their RNA, was first described in 1970 by Temin and
David Baltimore independently. In 1983
Luc Montagnier's team at the
Pasteur Institute in France, first isolated the retrovirus now called HIV. In 1989
Michael Houghton's team at
Chiron Corporation discovered
hepatitis C. ==Detecting viruses==