Born in
Siegen, West Germany in 1967,[6] Türeci is the daughter of Turkish immigrants. Her mother was a
biologist. Her father, a
surgeon, was from
Istanbul and worked at the Catholic hospital St. Elisabeth-Stift in Lastrup in the district of
Cloppenburg.[7][8] She attended, among others, the Städtisches Gymnasium in
Bad Driburg and the
Werner-von-Siemens-Gymnasium in
Bad Harzburg.[9] As a child, she was strongly inspired by the nuns who worked to help people at the hospital her father worked at.[10]
While completing her final year of studies, Türeci met her future husband, Uğur Şahin, who was working at Saarland University Hospital in Homburg.[13] They discovered that they shared an interest in using the body's immune system to fight cancer.[14][15] The couple married in 2002 and had a daughter four years later.[16][17] Although Türeci and her husband became billionaires as a result of their business interests, the family continues to live modestly.[10][18]
Due to the proposition of the Rhineland-Palatinate parliamentary group of the SPD, she will be a voting member of the 17th Federal Assembly for the
2022 German presidential election.[19]
Türeci has been an honorary citizen of the state capital Mainz since March 2022.[20]
Career
Özlem Türeci works as a medical scientist and basic researcher in the field of immunology. She researches target structures in order to develop new therapies against cancer, infectious diseases and diseases of the immune and nervous systems. One focus is on the identification and characterization of tumor-specific molecules and the development of personalized therapeutic approaches.
University Medicine Mainz
Türeci was a staff member of the
University Medical Center Mainz [
de] in the special research area of
immunology.[21][22] Since 2002, she has been a private lecturer there in the field of
cancer immunotherapy. Together with her husband and their mentor, the immunologist Christoph Huber, she developed the concept of a "translational institute", which was realized in 2001 with the foundation of TRON, short for "translational oncology."[23][24][25] This is a
biopharmaceuticalresearch institute that develops new diagnostics and drugs for the therapy of cancer and other diseases with high unmet medical needs.[26] Two companies later founded by Türeci and her husband are spin-offs of work done at the university in Mainz.[27] Türeci accepted the appointment to the professorship for "Personalized Immunotherapy" at the University Medicine of the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz and the Helmholtz Institute "HI-TRON Mainz" founded in 2019 at the end of 2021.
Ganymed Pharmaceuticals
In 2001, Türeci and her future husband founded the company Ganymed Pharmaceuticals.[28] This company focused on a new class of cancer drugs called ideal
monoclonal antibodies[29] and developed
zolbetuximab, which is used to treat
esophageal and
gastric cancer.[30] She was
chief scientific officer from 2001 to 2008 and led the company from 2008 to 2016 in the role of chief executive officer. In 2016, the company was sold to Astellas Pharma for $1.4 billion and is now a
subsidiary of that company.[10][31]
BioNTech
In 2008, Türeci, her husband, and Christoph Huber founded the Mainz-based biotechnology company BioNTech,[16][32] choosing a name derived from Biopharmaceutical New Technologies.[33] Türeci has been
Chief Medical Officer (CMO) of the company since 2018.[34][35] As CMO, she is primarily responsible for Clinical Research and Development.[36] From 2009 to 2018, she served as
chair of the company's scientific
advisory board. Originally, the company focused on the development and manufacturing of active
immunotherapies based on
Messenger RNA (mRNA) and other technologies for a patient-specific approach to the treatment of cancer and other serious
diseases.[16][10][23][37] Along with researchers from TRON, they hired
Katalin Karikó, who had developed a way to avoid triggering an
inflammatory reaction when injecting an mRNA drug.[25][38][33]
Project Lightspeed – Development of COVID-19 vaccine
In January 2020, Türeci's husband read an article in The Lancet medical journal regarding a
novel coronavirus later named
COVID-19.[16][10][36] Concerned that a
pandemic could be coming, the couple decided to apply the
mRNA vaccine technology they had been researching for two decades to developing a vaccine against the disease,[32][18] which at the time was spreading in
China.[10][25]
They convinced the American pharmaceutical company
Pfizer, with whom they had previously begun working on an
influenza vaccine, to help with development and distribution costs.[29] By March 2020, they had five vaccine candidates ready to test in humans, and by November 2020, results indicated that the vaccine was more than 90% effective.[16][10] The following month, the vaccine was authorized for use in
Britain and the
United States, and the first patient was injected at a hospital in
Coventry.[32][25][29] As of February 2021, BioNTech was planning to produce 2 billion doses of their vaccine by the end of 2021.[39]
Türeci was responsible for the
clinical trials in the development of the vaccine called BNT162b2 (the
Pfizer–BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine, sold under the brand name
Comirnaty).[40][10][41] Türeci credits the rapid success of the project in part to international collaboration, including Pfizer and the Chinese firm
Fosun Pharma.[32] BioNTech itself has staff from 60 countries.[32]
Türeci and her husband were named Financial TimesPeople of the Year for 2020 based on their ability to produce a safe and effective vaccine for COVID-19 less than a year after the
genetic sequence of the virus was released, an achievement cited as "one of the greatest medical breakthroughs of our time."[25] They also appeared on the cover of the American news magazine
Time in January 2021.[18]
Current initiatives
Using funds from the successful vaccine, BioNTech plans[update] to pursue its original goal of creating an mRNA-based
cancer vaccine; Türeci remarked in March 2021 that the company had several vaccines, with the expectation of offering them to patients within 2 years.[32] Ideally, they will be able to design tailor-made therapies for individual patients. So far, they have treated over 440 patients with 17 types of tumors.[33]
In addition, BioNTech is working on an mRNA vaccine to prevent malaria and investigating the production of vaccines in Africa.[42]
Other
Türeci has filed more than 500 international
patent applications and published more than 110 articles in peer-reviewed scientific journals.[34] She is internationally active as a
lecturer.[43]
Katalin Karikó – Hungarian-American biochemist (born 1955)
References
^"Über zwei Wissenschaftler, die nicht nur Hoffnung gegen das Virus machen" (in German).
Tagesspiegel. 26 April 2020. Retrieved 17 September 2021. Beide sind Kinder türkischer Einwanderer, deutsche Staatsbürger und weltweit angesehene Wissenschaftler. [Both are children of Turkish immigrants, German citizens, and internationally respected scientists]
^Philip Oltermann (10 November 2020),
"Uğur Şahin and Özlem Türeci: German 'dream team' behind vaccine", The Guardian,
archived from the original on 17 January 2021, retrieved 6 February 2021, The comments hinted at the scientific rigour, unrelenting work ethic and appetite for entrepreneurship that has seen Sahin and Türeci's company outpace more well-established competitors in the race for a Covid-19 vaccine – and made the couple the first Germans with Turkish roots to enter their country's rich list this autumn, at number 93.
^"Das Forscherpaar" [The Research Couple]. interactive.spiegel.de (in German).
Der Spiegel. 2021.
Archived from the original on 26 February 2022. Retrieved 26 February 2022.
^"Werte schaffen durch Innovation"(PDF), Natur & Geist-Das Forschungsmagazin der Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz,
archived(PDF) from the original on 20 March 2021, retrieved 30 November 2020
^Stolzenberg, Tobias (2018),
"Zwei gegen den Krebs", Technology Review (in German), vol. 5, Hannover: Heise Verlag,
archived from the original on 20 March 2021, retrieved 26 October 2020
^
ab"Ehrenbürger:innenwürde (Aufzeichnung)" [Award of the honorary citizenship of the state capital Mainz.]. www.mainz.de (in German). 10 March 2022. Retrieved 13 May 2022.
^"AG Sahin/Türeci", 14. Mainzer Sommer Uni, III. Medizinische Klinik und Poliklinik der Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz,
archived from the original on 20 March 2021, retrieved 30 November 2020
^Über TRON (in German), TRON – Translationale Onkologie an der Universitätsmedizin der Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz,
archived from the original on 20 March 2021, retrieved 26 October 2020