- C.J. Peters
Clarence James Peters, Jr, MD (b. 23 September 1940,
Midland, Texas ), known as C.J. Peters, is aphysician , fieldvirologist and former U.S. Army colonel. He is noted for his efforts in trying to stem epidemics of exotic infectious diseases such as theEbola virus ,Hanta virus andRift Valley Fever (RVF). He is an eminent authority on the virology, pathogenesis and epidemiology ofhemorrhagic fever virus es.Biography
Peters grew up in
Odessa, Texas . AtRice University , he initially majored inchemical engineering , but switched to chemistry his junior year after taking courses withThomas Brackett . He obtained his medical degree atJohns Hopkins School of Medicine and served his residency ininternal medicine at theUniversity of Texas Southwestern Medical School . He developed an interest intropical medicine andvirology while serving five years as a research associate at theNational Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease intramural laboratory inPanama . Upon returning Stateside, he completed his fellowship inimmunology at the Scripps Clinic and Research Foundation.He entered active duty in the
U.S. Army and from 1977 through 1992 held several positions at theU.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID),Fort Detrick ,Maryland where he worked onbiodefense and hazardous virus research. His positions there ranged from research scientist and Medical Division chief to Disease Assessment Division chief. He led the team that controlled a 1989 Ebola introduction into a monkey facility inReston, Virginia (a story recounted inRichard Preston ’s best-selling 1994 book "The Hot Zone ").From 1992 to 2000 Peters was head of the
Special Pathogens Branch at theCenters for Disease Control where he investigated hazardous emerging viruses. These included the agent causing the new diseasehantavirus pulmonary syndrome in the southwestern US, which he discovered and named. He also led efforts in Africa (Ebola,Marburg ,Lassa , RVF), Asia (Nipah virus inMalaysia ), and South America (Bolivian hemorrhagic fever , hantavirus pulmonary syndrome,Venezuelan equine encephalitis ) to control outbreaks.Since 2000, Peters has been the John Sealy Distinguished University Professor of Tropical and Emerging Virology at
University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB) where he has an active research program inSARS , RVF, and other human pathogens. He is a professor in the department of pathology and in the department of microbiology and immunology. He is a member of the World Health Organization Collaborating Center for Tropical Diseases. He is also director for biodefense at the UTMB Center for Biodefense and Emerging Infectious Diseases.Peters has published more than 300 papers on research and control of viral diseases including more than 70 publications on RVF virus and more than 60 publications on
arenavirus es. He has served on numerous committees dealing with disease problems world wide and has been called back as a consultant to CDC and USAMRIID on influenza, vaccines, and other issues after his departure. He consulted with theTaipei government on SARS control.Current work
Most of Peters' current work in the laboratory deals with
Bunyaviridae (including thephylogeny ofphlebovirus es such as RVF),Arenaviridae (Lassa fever, South American hemorrhagic fevers) and SARS CoV. He runs an active program of human and animal vaccine development for RVF usingreverse genetics . He and his colleagueIlya Frolov are developing alphavirusreplicon vectored RVF vaccines for use in livestock and ultimately in humans. His arenavirus research concentrates on the effects of infection on cellular function, particularly those molecular interactions related to vascular permeability. SARS-CoV work includes antiviral drug development, model characterization, and interferon interactions. A BSL-4 laboratory recently opened at UTMB to allow scientists there to work safely with any pathologic agent. Peters expects to transition some of the projects to higher hazard viral hemorrhagic fevers and to develop projects on other viruses such as tick-borneflavivirus es, highly virulentavian influenza strains, and Nipah virus, a new, highly virulentparamyxovirus .References
*Peters, C.J. and
Mark Olshaker (1998), "Virus Hunter: Thirty Years of Battling Hot Viruses Around the World",Random House .
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