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History:
The Epstein–Barr virus was named after
Michael Anthony Epstein (born 18 May 1921), now a professor emeritus at the University of Bristol,
and
Yvonne Barr (1932–2016), a 1966 Ph.D graduate from the University of London, who together discovered[40] and, in 1964, published on the existence of the virus.[41] In 1961, Epstein, a pathologist and expert electron microscopist, attended a lecture on "The Commonest Children's Cancer in Tropical Africa—A Hitherto Unrecognised Syndrome." This lecture, by Denis Parsons Burkitt, a surgeon practicing in Uganda, was the description of the "endemic variant" (pediatric form) of the disease that bears his name. In 1963, a specimen was sent from Uganda to Middlesex Hospital to be cultured. Virus particles were identified in the cultured cells, and the results were published in The Lancet in 1964 by Epstein, Bert Achong, and Barr. Cell lines were sent to Werner and Gertrude Henle at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia who developed serological markers. In 1967, a technician in their laboratory developed mononucleosis and they were able to compare a stored serum sample, showing that antibodies to the virus developed.[42][43][44] In 1968, they discovered that EBV can directly immortalize B cells after infection, mimicking some forms of EBV-related infections,[45] and confirmed the link between the virus and infectious mononucleosis.[46]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epstein–Barr_virus#History