- Jacques Miller
Infobox Scientist
name = Jacques Francis Albert Pierre Miller
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caption = Jacques Francis Albert Pierre Miller
birth_date =April 2 1931
birth_place =Nice
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nationality =France
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alma_mater =University of Sydney
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known_for =thymus
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Jacques Francis Albert Pierre Miller FRS (bornApril 2 1931 ) is a distinguished research scientist. He is famous for having discovered the function of thethymus and for the identification, in mammalian species of the two major subsets oflymphocytes (T cells andB cells ) and their function.Miller was born on
April 2 1931 , inNice ,France , as J.F.A.P. Meunier, and grew up inFrance ,Switzerland andChina , mostly inShanghai . After the outbreak ofWorld War II andJapan 's entry into the war, his family moved in 1941 toSydney ,Australia , and changed their last name to “Miller”. He was educated atSt Aloysius' College in SydneyFollowing a distinguished undergraduate career in medicine at the
University of Sydney , Miller began in the early 1960s his PhD studies at the Chester Beatty Research Institute in South Kensington,London , where he investigated the pathogenesis of lymphocyticleukaemia in mice and the role of thethymus in that disease. This was at a time when thethymus was believed to be a vestigial organ with no function. Miller discovered that thethymus is vital for development and function of the adaptive immune system, by showing that experimental animals without athymus at birth were incapable of rejecting foreign tissues and resisting many infections.In 1966, Miller returned to
Australia to become a research group leader atThe Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research (WEHI) inMelbourne , at the invitation of its new director SirGustav Nossal , the successor of Sir Macfarlane Burnet. There, he discovered that mammalianlymphocytes can be separated intoT cells andB cells , and that these interact to allow normalantibody production (T cell help ). His work also showed that thethymus produces theT cells , that it removes autoreactiveT cells (central T cell tolerance) and several other landmark findings inimmunology . These are considered crucial to understanding diseases such ascancer ,autoimmunity andAIDS , as well as processes such astransplant rejection ,allergy and antiviral immunity. Miller is semi-retired since 1996 and still works several days each week at theWEHI .References
* [https://sciencegrants.dest.gov.au/scienceprize/Pages/Doc.aspx?name=previous_winners/PM2003Miller.htm 2003 Prime Minister's Prize for Science: Professor Jacques Miller, The Modern 'Father' of Immunology]
* Miller JF. Immunological function of the thymus. Lancet. 1961 Sep 30;2:748-9.
* Miller JF. The thymus and the development of immunologic responsiveness. Science. 1964 Jun 26;144:1544-51.
* Miller JF, Mitchell GF. The thymus and the precursors of antigen reactive cells. Nature. 1967 Nov 18;216(5116):659-63.
* Miller JF, Sprent J. Cell-to-cell interaction in the immune response. VI. Contribution of thymus-derived cells and antibody-forming cell precursors to immunological memory. J Exp Med. 1971 Jul 1;134(1):66-82.DEFAULTSORT:Miller, Jacques
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