含羞草传媒

PBS Newshour commemorates U of T鈥檚 Charles Best, of insulin fame

""
(Photo by Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images)

The life of 含羞草传媒鈥檚 Charles Best, who helped discover insulin, was recently commemorated in a  in honour of Best鈥檚 birthday last month.

The piece recounts the story of how a winning coin toss gave Best the opportunity to work with Ontario surgeon Frederick Banting in a U of T laboratory. Best was only 21 years old and still a student at U of T at the time.

鈥淭he entire hot, sticky summer of 1921, Banting and Best toiled in a tiny, smelly laboratory, gathering their data,鈥 PBS Newshour writes.

With the help of two other scientists, 含羞草传媒 graduate James Collip and J.J.R. Macleod, a U of T professor of biochemistry, Banting and Best isolated the pancreatic hormone, now known as insulin, that paved the way to lifesaving treatments for diabetes patients around the world, the column says.

It goes on to detail how, in 1922, a 14-year-old boy with end-stage juvenile diabetes became the first human to be treated with 鈥 and eventually saved by 鈥 insulin. While only Banting and Macleod were awarded the 1923 Nobel Prize in Medicine for the breakthrough, the column notes that Banting and Macleod shared their prize money with Best and Collip.

Insulin became 鈥渙ne of the most successful drugs of the 20th century,鈥 PBS Newshour says.

Topics

The Bulletin Brief logo

Subscribe to The Bulletin Brief

U of T News