The accidental discovery of the "miracle drug" penicillin

Penicillin was mass produced during WWII and given to Allied soldiers.
Photo credit: US National Library of Medicine
Before antibiotics, simple bacterial infections ended in death. After a holiday in 1928, Alexander Fleming was cleaning out bacterial plates and found something unusual. He noticed bacteria were dying on one of the plates, but only around a unique mold colony that he later determined to be a fungus in the Penicillium genus. This mold happens to kill not only the genus of bacteria he was growing, Staphylococcus, but luckily for us a variety of other bacteria! Due to the challenge of isolating penicillin, this revolutionary discovery lay dormant for a decade before Ernest Chain and Howard Florey picked up Fleming's work by isolating penicillin, and testing it on mice infected with bacteria. In 1945, they were all awarded the Nobel Prize for the discovery and “its curative effect in various infectious diseases.” Penicillin was heralded a “miracle drug” and continues to save lives today.
The second paper: Penicillin as a chemotherapeutic agent 
The Discovery and Development of penicillin Commemorative Booklet

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