History of antimicrobial chemotherapy: Who proposed the foundational concept of ‘‘selective (specific) toxicity’’—the idea that a drug can target a pathogen more than the host?

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: Paul Ehrlich

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:
Selective toxicity underpins modern antimicrobial therapy: exploit biological differences between microbes and humans to achieve efficacy with minimal harm. Identifying its origin highlights how conceptual breakthroughs shape clinical practice.



Given Data / Assumptions:

  • We are asked for the scientist associated with specific toxicity.
  • Multiple historical figures made pivotal contributions to microbiology and antibiotics.
  • Only one coined and advanced this specific principle in chemotherapy.



Concept / Approach:
Paul Ehrlich articulated ‘‘selective toxicity’’ and pursued ‘‘magic bullets’’ that would selectively kill pathogens. His work on arsphenamine (Salvarsan) for syphilis inaugurated systematic antimicrobial chemotherapy. Fleming discovered penicillin; Pasteur pioneered germ theory and vaccination; Watson is associated with DNA structure; Lister with antisepsis.



Step-by-Step Solution:
Match the concept to the correct historical figure.Exclude contemporaries whose contributions lie elsewhere (antisepsis, vaccines, discovery rather than conceptual chemotherapy).Select ‘‘Paul Ehrlich’’.



Verification / Alternative check:
Ehrlich’s work established screening paradigms for antimicrobial activity, a practice continued in modern drug discovery.



Why Other Options Are Wrong:
They are important pioneers but did not originate the selective toxicity framework.



Common Pitfalls:
Attributing selective toxicity to Fleming due to penicillin’s fame; the concept predates antibiotic era.



Final Answer:
Paul Ehrlich.


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