The immortal cells of Henrietta Lacks Robin Bulleri

Imagine something small enough to float
on a particle of dust

that holds the keys to understanding
cancer, virology, and genetics.

Luckily for us,

such a thing exists in the form
of trillions upon trillions

of human lab-grown cells
called HeLa.

Let’s take a step back for a second.

Scientists grow human cells in the lab
to study how they function,

understand how diseases develop,

and test new treatments without
endangering patients.

To make sure that they can repeat
these experiments over and over,

and compare the results
with other scientists,

they need huge populations
of identical cells

that can duplicate themselves
faithfully for years,

but until 1951, all human cell lines
that researchers tried to grow

had died after a few days.

Then a John Hopkins scientist
named George Gey

received a sample of
a strange looking tumor:

dark purple, shiny, jelly-like.

This sample was special.

Some of its cells just kept dividing,

and dividing,

and dividing.

When individual cells died,

generations of copies took their place
and thrived.

The result was an endless source of
identical cells that’s still around today.

The very first immortal human cell line.

Gey labeled it “HeLa” after the patient
with the unusual tumor, Henrietta Lacks.

Born on a tobacco farm in Virginia,

she lived in Baltimore with her husband
and five children.

She died of aggressive cervical cancer

a few months after her tumorous cells
were harvested,

and she never knew about them.

So what’s so special about the cells
from Henrietta Lacks

that lets them survive
when other cell lines die?

The short answer is
we don’t entirely know.

Normal human cells have built-in
control mechanisms.

They can divide about 50 times
before they self destruct

in a process called apoptosis.

This prevents the propagation
of genetic errors

that creep in after
repeated rounds of division.

But cancer cells ignore these signals,
dividing indefinitely

and crowding out normal cells.

Still, most cell lines eventually die off,
especially outside the human body.

Not HeLa, though, and that’s the part
we can’t yet explain.

Regardless, when Dr. Gey realized he had
the first immortal line of human cells,

he sent samples
to labs all over the world.

Soon the world’s first
cell production facility

was churning out
6 trillion HeLa cells a week,

and scientists put them to work
in an ethically problematic way,

building careers and fortunes
off of Henrietta’s cells

without her or her family’s consent,
or even knowledge until decades later.

The polio epidemic was at its peak
in the early 50s.

HeLa cells, which easily took up
and replicated the virus,

allowed Jonas Salk to test his vaccine.

They’ve been used to study diseases,

including measles,

mumps,

HIV,

and ebola.

We know that human
cells have 46 chromosomes

because a scientist working with HeLa
discovered a chemcial

that makes chromosomes visible.

HeLa cells themselves actually have
around 80 highly mutated chromosomes.

HeLa cells were the first to be cloned.

They’ve traveled to outer space.

Telomerase,

an enzyme that helps cancer cells evade
destruction by repairing their DNA,

was discovered first in HeLa cells.

In an interesting turn of fate,

thanks to HeLa, we know that cervical
cancer can be caused by a virus called HPV

and now there’s a vaccine.

HeLa-fueled discoveries have filled
thousands of scientific papers,

and that number is probably even higher
than anyone knows.

HeLa cells are so resilient that they
can travel on almost any surface:

a lab worker’s hand,

a piece of dust,

invading cultures of other cells
and taking over like weeds,

countless cures, patents and discoveries
all made thanks to Henrieta Lacks.