Abstract

This paper explores the different identities adopted by connective tissue research at the University of Manchester during the second half of the 20th century. By looking at the long-term redefinition of a research programme, it sheds new light on the interactions between different and conflicting levels in the study of biomedicine, such as the local and the global, or the medical and the biological. It also addresses the gap in the literature between the first biomedical complexes after World War II and the emergence of biotechnology. Connective tissue research in Manchester emerged as a field focused on new treatments for rheumatic diseases. During the 1950s and 60s, it absorbed a number of laboratory techniques from biology, namely cell culture and electron microscopy. The transformations in scientific policy during the late 70s and the migration of Manchester researchers to the US led them to adopt recombinant DNA methods, which were borrowed from human genetics. This resulted in the emergence of cell matrix biology, a new field which had one of its reference centres in Manchester. The Manchester story shows the potential of detailed and chronologically wide local studies of patterns of work to understand the mechanisms by which new biomedical tools and institutions interact with long-standing problems and existing affiliations.

Highlights

  • The investigation of contemporary biomedicine has been a main concern in both historical and contemporary Science and Technology Studies (STS)

  • This paper explores the different identities adopted by connective tissue research at the University of Manchester during the second half of the 20th century

  • The scholarship on biotechnology is sometimes framed in terms of the emergence of a new form of q The investigations leading to the results reported in this paper were conducted while working as a Research Associate at the Centre for the History of Science, Technology and Medicine of the University of Manchester

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Summary

Introduction

The investigation of contemporary biomedicine has been a main concern in both historical and contemporary Science and Technology Studies (STS). Historians and sociologists of biology, as well as policy scholars, have investigated the interactions between biologists, physicians, research institutions, clinical sites and funding agencies in the emergence of programmes expected to lead laboratory biology to the diagnosis and treatment of diseases This has resulted in a wide literature both in scope and approach: the scholarship covers the second half of the 20th century and addresses the development of biomedicine from different perspectives. The scholarship on biotechnology is sometimes framed in terms of the emergence of a new form of q The investigations leading to the results reported in this paper were conducted while working as a Research Associate at the Centre for the History of Science, Technology and Medicine of the University of Manchester.

Rheumatism and the origins of connective tissue research
The collagen group and the biosynthesis systems
The reorganisation of Manchester biomedicine
The transformation of collagen research
Automation and spread of recombinant techniques
Conclusions
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