Philippa Marrack, PhD
Medical Researcher
Born June 28, 1945
Inducted 2010
Adopted by Philippa Marrack's Family
Philippa Marrack is a world-renowned immunology researcher whose
groundbreaking work on T-cells has impacted the health of people
across the world. Her findings shape medicine’s current understanding
of the human immune system, vaccines, HIV, and other immune disorders.
Working in the labs at National Jewish Health in Denver, Marrack
and her husband and fellow researcher, John Kappler, were among
the first in the world to isolate the T-cell receptor, a crucial
component of the immune response that identifies foreign invaders
inside the body and destroys them. As a direct result of this research,
Marrack discovered how the T-cells that could target the body’s
own tissues are destroyed in the thymus before they can cause problems.
It’s when rogue cells are not destroyed that they cause destructive
autoimmune diseases like AIDS, diabetes, MS, and lupus. Marrack
and Kappler also discovered superantigens, powerful toxins that
stimulate large numbers of T-cells and can cause devastating immune
responses and violent symptoms such as those seen in toxic shock
syndrome or food poisoning. Marrack’s current research projects
center on why certain autoimmune diseases, like lupus and MS, are
more prevalent in women than in men.
Born in England, Marrack earned her doctorate of philosophy degree
in biological sciences at Cambridge University. She came to the
United States for postdoctoral research and met her lifelong scientific
partner and husband, John Kappler. They joined the faculties at
National Jewish Health and the University of Colorado Health Sciences
Center in 1979.
During her career, Marrack has published more than 300 peer-reviewed
journal articles, her latest in 2009 in the science journal Nature.
As ranked by citations and the impact of printed journal articles,
she is the third most influential researcher in the nation and
the top female researcher. She has been a member of the U.S. National
Academy of Sciences since 1989 and a fellow of the Royal Society
in Great Britain since 1997. Marrack was elected to the prestigious
international Institute of Medicine in 2008. |