Beatrice Hahn


Beatrice H. Hahn is an American virologist and biomedical researcher. She is a professor of Medicine and Microbiology in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. In November 2002, Discover magazine listed Hahn as one of the 50 most important women scientists at that time.
Hahn discovered that the human immunodeficiency virus originated in other primates and traversed to humans. Hahn and her research group established that wild-living chimpanzees in southern Cameroon were a natural reservoir of Simian immunodeficiency viruses. They developed non-invasive techniques for gathering genetic data. By making genetic comparisons between HIV-1 and SIVs, they found that SIVs had traversed between humans and nonhuman primate species through multiple connections.
HIV resulted from cross-species infections, with SIVs traveling from chimpanzees and gorillas to humans.
Hahn later determined that the malaria parasite also traversed from other primates to humans, in a single event.

Early life and education

Beatrice Hahn was born in Munich, Germany on February 13, 1955. Her zest for medicine began at an early age, as she was greatly influenced by her father who was a distinguished primary care physician. Her father started practicing medicine in rural Bavaria, where he was one of the first physicians in the area to utilize an X-ray machine for the purpose of diagnostics. Her father allowed her to use some of his medical equipment growing up, and she was fascinated by studying urine slides under the microscope and learning to draw blood. His passion and dedication to his career greatly inspired Beatrice, and she set her sights on becoming a physician as soon as she began her education.
Hahn left home to attend medical school at Technical University Munich, Munich, Germany, where she gained her M.D. degree in 1981. She worked as an intern at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich from 1981 to 1982. She attained her Doctorate in Medicine from Technical University Munich in 1982.
Her doctoral thesis was influenced by her upbringing and early childhood. Hahn remembered herding and milking cows as a child. Reflecting on how integral a role cattle played in rural Bavaria, Hahn wondered if the close relationship of people and cattle could be detrimental to the humans, through exposure to bovine virus. Her thesis specifically focused on the bovine leukemia virus, a very serious disease in cattle, which is closely related to the human tumor virus HTLV-1. Hahn would later continue her research and interest in the public health ramifications of animal-human contact in her research on zoonoses.

Career

After graduating, Hahn began her career with a fellowship from the German Science Foundation in Robert Gallo's National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Maryland. She decided to leave Germany because she believed she would have better opportunities for research and for funding in the United States. In 1985, she joined the faculty of the University of Alabama at Birmingham and established her own laboratory. She was a co-director of the Center for AIDS Research at UAB from 2003 to 2011. In 2011, Hahn joined the faculty of the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania along with her husband and research partner George Shaw. Hahn and Shaw also work with CHAVI, a multi-institutional consortium. Hahn is the lead researcher of CHAVI's Viral Biology Team.
In addition to her work in universities and as a researcher, Hahn is also a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Academy of Microbiology, the National Academy of Medicine, and the National Academy of Sciences. She is also a member of the advisory board of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation's HIV/AIDS Program and has served on numerous NIH Counsel groups.

Research

Hahn met Robert Gallo when she was a student at the Technical University of Munich. He was a virologist and a researcher at the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Maryland. Most of his research was focused on leukemia, the disease that had taken his sister's life at an early age. One of the main areas of interest for Gallo was tumor-causing retroviruses. This sparked the interest of Hahn because Bovine leukemia virus is an example of such a retrovirus.
Hahn's wish to work in Gallo's lab was made possible when she received a fellowship from the German Science Foundation.
Hahn left her home in Germany and started research at the National Cancer Institute on May 1, 1982. There, she began her research into the origins of HIV/AIDS. AIDS had just become prevalent in the United States a year before she arrived. All of the patients with the reported disease were gay males and displayed symptoms of a skin cancer and unique form of pneumonia. Gallo's laboratory had been studying this new disease outbreak and Hahn joined the investigation.
In 1983, George Shaw joined Gallo's laboratory and he and Hahn began to collaborate on their research. After a fellow researcher, Mikulas Popovic, successfully cultured and isolated the virus, Hahn and Shaw cloned the virus's genome, becoming the first scientists to do so.
They were able to determine that the isolated retrovirus was the cause of AIDS. They went on to discover that HIV originated from chimpanzees, gorillas, and sooty mangabey strains of simian immunodeficiency virus. Their team used non-invasive research techniques in order to study endangered species of primates in the wild. Contrary to the prevailing scientific opinion, Hahn found that SIV does cause disease in its hosts and that chimpanzees represent a reservoir of HIV. She also discovered that SIV could be transmitted sexually and through breast milk among chimpanzees. She has also cloned HIV-2 and catalogued genetic variants of HIV-1 and their drug resistance.
Hahn and Shaw had many papers published and in 1985 they were both recruited by the University of Alabama at Birmingham's Comprehensive Cancer Center to lead and conduct human retrovirus research. Both excelled in their work and Hahn went on to become a distinguished professor in the Departments of Microbiology and medicine as well as work as co-director at the Center for AIDS research at UAB. Hahn and her long-time research partner George Shaw married in 1988.
After working at UAB, Hahn and Shaw moved to the Center for AIDS Research at the University of Pennsylvania in 2011. There she has used non-invasive fecal sampling to investigate SIV and HIV in primate populations. Her research has also included the origins of the human malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum; determining that P. falciparum was transmitted to humans from gorillas in a single event in West Africa.

Details of research

Hahn conducted her research from an evolutionary perspective when studying disease mechanisms and HIV/SIV gene function. Simian immunodeficiency viruses are a type of retroviruses that are capable of infecting a myriad of non-human primate species located in Africa.
Hanh made the startling discovery that certain SIVs had traversed between humans and certain nonhuman primate species a multitude of times to result in types 1 and 2 human immunodeficiency virus. The two viruses she identified were SIVcpz from chimpanzees and SIVsmm from sooty mangabeys. The realization that the transfer of SIVs had generated HIV led Hahn to conclude that presence of Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome was due to the cross-species infections of humans by lentiviruses of primate origin.
A careful analysis of the high degree of relatedness between chimpanzees and humans was a major focus in Hanh’s laboratory. Knowing that chimpanzees and humans share more than 98% sequence identity across their genomes, Hanh sought to uncover what exactly varies in the interactions between virus and host that cause differences in viral pathogenicity. Hahn made advances in the understanding the origin of HIV-1, SIVcpz, and natural SIVcpz reservoirs.

Study on Origin of HIV-1

The theorization that chimpanzees may be source of HIV-1 began when a chimpanzee was found to have a lentivirus that was closely related to HIV-1. The genome of SIVcpzGAB1 had an accessory gene that was so far unique to HIV-1 as well as many of the same reading frames. However, experiments carried out on more chimpanzees continuously resulted in apparently contradictory results as to whether chimpanzees were the original source of the SIVcpz.
One experiment performed on fifty chimpanzees resulted in only two possessing HIV-1 cross-reactive antibodies, which showed a much lower SIVcpz infection rate in contrast to other naturally occurring SIV infections. This finding indicated that there was a third unknown source that both humans and chimpanzees could have acquired the virus from.
Another study reported that a chimpanzee named Noah had a virus called SIVcpzANT that clustered with SIVcpzGAB1 in phylogenetic trees but was twice as distant from SIVcpzGAB1 and HIV-1 strains as they were from each other. This resulted in more support for a third unknown source being the true SIVcpz reservoir.
Hahn was able to prove the original theory through analyzation of the SIVcpz phylogeny in relation to the subspecies origin of the infected chimpanzee host. Her studies showed that the chimpanzees that had viruses similar to HIV-1 and to one another belonged to the same group; P.t. troglodytes. On the other hand, Noah, the chimpanzee with the virus that was extremely distant, was a P.t. schweinfurthii. This proved that the origin of a subspecies' chimpanzee host was what was responsible for two different phylogenetic lineages of SIVcpz strains. Hahn's careful phylogenetic analysis also supported that the source of HIV-1 was the chimpanzees that were members of P.t. troglodytes.

Honors and awards