D. Carleton Gajdusek dies at 85; Nobel Prize winner identified exotic disease, was unrepentant pedophile
By Thomas H. Maugh II
December 18, 2008
Dr. D. Carleton Gajdusek, the brilliant yet deeply flawed pediatrician,
virologist and anthropologist who won the 1976 Nobel Prize in medicine
for his identification and description of kuru, the exotic disease of a
remote tribe in New Guinea that was caused by a family of mysterious
agents called prions, died Dec. 12 at the hotel where he lived in
Tromso, Norway. He was 85.
No cause of death has been released, but he had suffered for years from
congestive heart failure, according to his biographer and former
student, Dr. Robert Klitzman of Columbia University.
An energetic and intellectual researcher, Gajdusek often said he was
more proud of his anthropological studies among the Fore and Anga
people of Micronesia than he was of the research that brought him the
ultimate prize.
But blinded by his hubris and self-admitted pedophilia, he spent
the last decade of his life in exile in Europe after his arrest and
imprisonment for molesting one of the more than 50 children he brought
to the United States, adopted and educated.
Intrigued by his two years of studying rabies, plague, arbovirus
infections and scurvy at the Institut Pasteur in Tehran, Gajdusek
scoured the Hindu Kush, the jungles of South America and the mountains,
swamps and high valleys of Papua New Guinea and Malaysia searching for
a rare disease he could make his own.
He found it when he met Dr. Vincent Zigas, an Estonian medical officer
who served the Fore people in eastern Papua New Guinea. Zigas
introduced him to the Stone Age people, who were suffering from a
mysterious malady that they called kuru, from the Fore word meaning "to
shake."
The disease, which caused trembling, sporadic fits of laughter and
madness before inevitably leading to death, affected one out of 10
people in the 35,000-member tribe. Autopsies showed that victims'
brains were riddled with gaping holes, making their once solid organs
resemble sponges -- leading to the general name spongiform
encephalopathies for diseases in the class.
The disease was not believed to result from an infection, because
victims did not suffer a fever and there were no signs of inflammation
-- both indications of classical infections. Most researchers thought
kuru was either hereditary or the result of a dietary deficiency.
Gajdusek described the disease in a 1957 issue of the New England
Journal of Medicine and took samples back to his lab at the National
Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md., for study. He concluded that the
disease was spread during an ancient funerary ritual when women and
children consumed the brains of the deceased.
Since that practice was formally banned in 1959, no new cases of the
disease have appeared except in those who were exposed before the ban
took effect.
Gajdusek injected samples of diseased human brain tissue into a variety
of small animals hoping to reproduce the disease, but without success.
He ultimately obtained some chimpanzees and injected them as well. At
first, that too yielded no results. But after periods ranging from 1
1/2 to three years, the animals began to develop symptoms similar to
those exhibited by the Fore.
In a 1966 paper in the journal Nature describing the transmission
experiments, Gajdusek dubbed the infectious agent a "slow,
unconventional virus."
Further studies by Gajdusek and others showed that a similar agent was
responsible for a disease in sheep called scrapie, another malady in
humans called Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease and the variant form of
Creutzfeldt-Jacob commonly known as mad cow disease.
Eventually, neurologist Stanley Prusiner of UC San Francisco identified
the infectious agent as an unexpected rogue form of protein called a
prion -- a feat that won him his own Nobel Prize in 1997.
Prions are mis-folded forms of protein that, through mechanisms not yet
understood, induce other proteins to assume similar shapes, disrupting
cellular metabolism and killing cells in the brain.
Prions cannot be disrupted even in boiling water, are not susceptible
to drug treatment and cannot be classified as living because they
contain no DNA or RNA. They are also not recognized by the immune
system as foreign, so the body cannot fight them off as it would any
other infectious agent.
Some researchers now believe that prions may also be involved in
producing dementia and perhaps even in triggering cancer. Gajdusek
later helped other researchers find genetically isolated populations
that helped shed light on the causes of hermaphroditism, Huntington's
disease and other rare illnesses.
Daniel Carleton Gajdusek was born Sept. 9, 1923, in Yonkers, N.Y., the
son of a Slovak father and a Hungarian mother. As a child, he
demonstrated a remarkable interest and skill in science, stimulated by
his aunt, Irene Dobroscky, who worked at the Boyce Thompson Institute
for Plant Research in New York.
She tutored him in the biology of plants and the insects that infested
them and introduced him to other researchers at the institute. During
the summers of his 13th to 16th years, he worked in the laboratory of
chemist John Arthur, synthesizing a variety of compounds that Arthur
thought might have insecticidal properties.
One of those chemicals, 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid, became a
commercial weed killer, and the institute based its patent claims on
young Gajdusek's laboratory notebook.
He was an undergraduate at the University of Rochester, then entered
Harvard Medical School, where he received his degree in 1946,
specializing in pediatrics. His postgraduate education included work at
Harvard, Columbia and Caltech, where he interacted with many of the
notable biologists of the era.
In 1951, he was drafted into the Army and sent to the Walter Reed Army
Medical Service Graduate School as a research virologist, spending time
at the Tehran institute. Afterward, he went to Australia to perform
postdoctoral work at the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical
Research. It was on the way home from this interlude that he discovered
the Fore, changing the course of his life forever.
Klitzman and others say Gajdusek mingled comfortably with the isolated
tribes, communicating easily in a nonverbal fashion and becoming a de
facto member of the tribes' extended families.
Some critics have charged that Gajdusek brought children from the
tribes to the United States and adopted them to satisfy his pedophilia.
But anthropologist Ceridwen Spark of Monash University in Australia,
who studied Gajdusek, argues that it was his need for an extended
family that led him to help the boys.
In any case, Gajdusek spent much of his own money raising the boys and
educating them, sending some to graduate school and medical school on
his own dime. But his efforts ultimately led to his downfall.
In 1996, one of his boys, by then an adult in college, went to the
police alleging that when he was a teenager his adopted father had
abused him. The FBI then recorded a call between the young man and
Gajdusek in which the scientist admitted that he was a pedophile, that
he had touched the boy sexually and that he had had sex with some of
the other boys.
He named one other boy in the conversation, and the boy confirmed the
story. But Gajdusek's friends helped the boy return to New Guinea, and
authorities could prosecute only the offense against the boy who had
gone to the police. On the advice of his lawyer, Gajdusek negotiated a
plea bargain and in April 1997 was sentenced to 12 to 18 months in
prison -- despite a stack of letters from prominent scientists begging
the court for leniency.
He was released the following April and immediately left for France,
spending the rest of his life working and writing in Europe. He
apparently liked the long, dark winters of Tromso because the isolation
gave him plenty of time for writing.
He remained unrepentant about his sexual relationships with the young
boys. He often said he thought American law was unduly prudish and
argued that he had chosen boys only from cultures where man-boy sex was
common and unremarkable.
In addition to his many adopted sons and daughters, Gajdusek is survived by two nephews, Karl Lawrence Gajdusek and Mark Terry.
thomas.maugh@latimes.com