Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

(LAT) Eli Sercarz, 75 - UCLA scientist made key discoveries in immunology

1 view
Skip to first unread message

BobF

unread,
Nov 20, 2009, 8:25:38 PM11/20/09
to

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-me-eli-sercarz21-2009nov21,0,3135558.story

latimes.com

OBITUARY

Eli Sercarz dies at 75; UCLA scientist made key discoveries in
immunology

Sercarz studied the concepts behind autoimmune diseases.

By Thomas H. Maugh II

4:42 PM PST, November 20, 2009

Eli E. Sercarz, who explored the mechanisms of autoimmunity and
developed key concepts about how the body's immune system attacks its
own tissues, died of renal cell cancer Nov. 3 in Topanga. He was 75.

"Eli Sercarz was one of the most highly esteemed immunologists in the
world," said Dr. Jonathan Braun, chairman of the department of
pathology and laboratory medicine at UCLA's Geffen School of Medicine,
where Sercarz spent most of his career. "Few men can claim such a huge
legacy of scientific achievement; fewer still will be so widely
remembered and missed."

Sercarz explored the tangle of proteins and sugar molecules on the
surface of cells that are recognized by the immune system. Typically,
only the very outermost regions of these tangles, called determinants,
are recognized by immune cells. As a young infant develops, his or her
T cells grow up in the presence of these determinants and come to
recognize them as "self," a process called tolerance. The immune cells
do not attack cells it recognizes as self.

But Sercarz discovered that there are buried regions of surface
proteins, called cryptic determinants, that can trigger an immune
response if they are exposed. A viral or bacterial attack can, in a
susceptible individual, expose these cryptic determinants, triggering
an autoimmune attack such as that found in lupus, rheumatoid
arthritis, multiple sclerosis and diabetes.

He also discovered the phenomenon known as determinant spreading, in
which white blood cells that begin the autoimmune reaction recruit
other white cells to join in and also attack cells to expose other
cryptic determinants, strengthening the immune attack and making the
disease more severe.

"This concept, which had originally been proposed by Sercarz and
colleagues, represents today the major hypothesis for the pathogenesis
of autoimmune diseases," noted Italian immunologist Antonio
Lanzavecchia wrote.

Eli Sercarz was born Feb. 14, 1934, in the Bronx to Polish immigrants.
His father was a radiation technologist, his mother a teacher of
Yiddish. As a youth, he suffered rheumatic fever twice. To help him
recover, his mother -- a vegetarian and a strong health proponent --
took him to the Rancho La Puerta spa in Tecate, Mexico, to recover.
The spa, run by a Hungarian, Dr. Edmond Szekely, offered a special
diet of grapes and yogurt, along with walking exercises.

Eli's mother, Aida, worked as a secretary at the spa in exchange for
his board. Young Eli would ride his bike across the border every day
to attend Mountain Empire High School in San Diego County. After his
recovery, he persuaded his mother to allow him to remain there alone
to finish high school, where he became valedictorian.

Sercarz earned his doctorate in immunology at Harvard in 1960, and he
did postdoctoral research at Harvard and MIT before joining the staff
of UCLA in 1963. Eventually, he rose to the prestigious rank of
"professor above scale," which is reserved for those who have made
novel and important contributions in their fields.

As he reached retirement age, he concluded that his UCLA laboratory
was becoming outdated. To solve the problem, in 1997 he took a post at
the La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology, where he built a
new lab. After five years, he moved his lab and his colleagues to the
Torrey Pines Institute for Molecular Studies in San Diego. He was
still working on manuscripts and overseeing research at the time of
his death.

A high-spirited man, Sercarz would often break into spontaneous
dances, cajoling his colleagues to join in festive celebrations of one
thing or another. He considered himself a connoisseur of exotic and
pungent cheeses, which he brought home in his suitcase from visits
abroad. Occasionally, the luggage would go astray, becoming quite ripe
by the time it was retrieved, colleagues said.

Sercarz is survived by his second wife, Rabyn Blake, an
environmentalist and artist; a son, Joel of Santa Monica; two
daughters, Lisa Kern of Santa Rosa and Sarayana Celada of Los Angeles;
and two stepsons, Charles and Andrew Sheldon of Topanga.


--

"It's not that I'm afraid to die. I just don't want to be there when it happens." - Woody Allen

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Wax-up and drop-in of Surfing's Golden Years: <http://www.surfwriter.net>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

0 new messages