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Our investigation
was guided by our prior experience with the Ag polymorphism. In preparing
this "history" of the discovery of Au, I constructed an outline based on a
hypothetico-deductive structure, showing the actual events which led to the
discovery of the association of Au with hepatitis. From this it is clear
that I could not have planned the investigation at its beginning to find the
cause of hepatitis B. This experience does not encourage an approach to
basic research which is based exclusively on specific-goal directed programs
for the solution of biological problems. The next step was to collect
information on the distribution of Au and anti-Au in different human
populations and disease groups. We had established a collection of serum and
plasma samples, later to develop into the Blood Collection of the Division
of Clinical Research of The Institute for Cancer Research (now The Fox Chase
Cancer Center) which now numbers more than 200,000 specimens. The antigen
was very stable; blood which had been frozen and stored for 10 years or more
still gave strong reactions for Au. Presence or absence of Au
appeared, at least in the early experiments, to be an inherent
characteristic of an individual. |