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What is the name of the cervical cancer victim that HeLa cells were named for?”

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What is the name of the cervical cancer victim that HeLa cells were named for?”

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A HeLa cell (also Hela or hela cell) is an immortal cell line used in scientific research. The cell line was derived from cervical cancer cells taken from Henrietta Lacks, who died from her cancer on October 4, 1951. The remarkable durability of this cell line is illustrated by its contamination of many other cell lines used in research. Contents [hide] * 1 George Otto Gey and Henrietta Lacks * 2 Telomerase * 3 Chromosome number * 4 Contamination * 5 Helacyton gartleri * 6 HeLa in popular culture * 7 See also * 8 References * 9 Further reading * 10 External links [edit] George Otto Gey and Henrietta Lacks HeLa cells stained with Hoechst 33258. The cells were propagated by George Otto Gey without Lacks’ knowledge or permission (neither she nor her family gave permission)[1] and later commercialized, although never patented in their original form. Then, as now, there was no requirement to inform a patient, or their relatives, about such matters because discarded material, or material obt

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nowpublic.com: Henrietta Lacks Remembered: HeLa Cells Fuel Medical Research by Jordan Yerman | February 1, 2010 at 10:52 am Henrietta Lacks died of cervical cancer in 1951, but she’s been contributing to medical science for over fifty years. Cancer cells taken from Henrietta Lacks were replicating outside a human body in a manner never before observed, and those cells have been replicating to this day. The so-named HeLa cells aided Jonas Salk in the development of the Polio vaccine, and have been instrumental in research into cancer and AIDS. Henrietta Lacks’ tissue sample was used for research without her knowledge or consent while she was a patient at Johns Hopkins Hospita by Dr George Gey, who used them to create an “immortal” cell line for future research. Ms. lacks has since been honored by Morehouse College in Atlanta, GA for posthumous contributions to medical science. Henrietta Lacks is the subject of a new book called The Immor

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Rebecca Skloot’s “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks’’ is a book about obsession. It begins with Skloot’s fascination with Lacks, a mother of five in Virginia in the 1950s who develops cancer, and the line of cells taken from her that unlocks the door to a number of important medical discoveries. Skloot first learns about Lacks in a community college biology class. Her teacher describes cell division as a choreographed dance. Embryos grow, wounds heal, but it takes only one mistake, an enzyme misfiring or a wrong protein activation, and you have cancer. He writes a name on the board: HENRIETTA LACKS, and tells of how when Lacks was dying of cervical cancer a surgeon at Johns Hopkins University sliced a piece of her tumor and put it in a petri dish.

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