BioNTech vaccine inventors to receive Germany’s Knight Commander’s Cross

Özlem Türeci and Ugur Sahin will be awarded high honors for contributing to the “containment of the coronavirus pandemic.” But the BioNTech founders feel uncomfortable with the cult status they have in Germany.

Hardly a year ago, Özlem Türeci and Ugur Sahin were still largely unknown names in the world of Big Pharma. Having founded their small biotech firm with the name BioNTech only in 2008, the work of the married couple focused primarily on cancer research.

But due to the devastating coronavirus pandemic and BioNTech’s project named “Lightspeed” launched in mid-January 2020, erstwhile the husband and wife team have become much feted around the world for developing the first vaccine against COVID-19 — the disease caused by an infection with the virus. Their shot, produced with US partner Pfizer, has proven more than 90% effective in creating immunity against the original virus, and reportedly also against its British and South African variants.

Therefore, one can rightly say BioNTech CEO Ugur Sahin and his chief medical officer, Özlem Türeci, are saving the lives of millions of people around the world.

Germany’s highest honors

German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier will present the Knight Commander’s Cross of the Federal Order of Merit to both

Türeci and Sahin on Friday. They are being honored for making “a decisive contribution to the containment of the coronavirus pandemic,” the President’s Office said in a statement released earlier in March.

The Knight Commander’s Cross belongs to the second of four sub-classes of Germany’s Order of Merit

The Knight Commander’s Cross is part of a group of decorations called the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany. The Order was called into being in 1951 by the first postwar German president, Theodor Heuss, and has since been awarded to more than 260,000 people. It comprises four groups, with eight regular and one special class, and is intended to “visibly express recognition and gratitude to deserving men and women of the German people and of foreign countries.”

Among the recipients of the highest honors Germany bestows, you find prominent foreigners like the British Queen, Elizabeth II, and former US President George W. Bush as well famous German figures like ex-Chancellor Helmut Kohl. Dance company director Pina Bausch, comedian Vicco von Bülow and a huge number of Germans from all walks of life have also been honored for their service to Germany.

Shifting focus to save the world

According to the German President’s Office, the couple is also receiving the cross for their “trailblazing and globally recognized research” in the field of mRNA technology. The novel gene therapy in vaccine development uses a small part of the virus’s genetic information to spark an immune response by producing protein directly in the human cell.

Prior to their research on COVID-19, Sahin and Türeci were already attempting to harness the human body’s ability to defend itself from bacteria and viruses. They sought to fight cancer with an immunotherapy that stimulates self-healing mechanisms and triggers the body’s own “internal police force” to render malignant tumors harmless.

Sahin and Türeci’s background in mRNA research allowed them to develop the BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine in the unusually short timespan of less than a year, making it the first shot against COVID-19 available in the world, following emergency use approval in the United States in November 2020.

In December, Sahin told DW that he didn’t see himself as a new “superhero” in vaccine research. “We were only able to do this because we have a fantastic team. A team of international scientists and staff from 60 different countries who have been working with us for years on this topic [mRNA research],” he said.

A lifelong passion

Apart from the couple’s meteoric rise to scientific stardom, little is known about the private lives of Sahin and Türeci.

Born in Turkey, Ugur Sahin was 4 when he and his mother moved to Cologne, Germany, to join his father, who worked for the Ford company. After graduating from high school, he studied medicine at the University of Cologne. “I was interested in immunotherapy,” said Sahin, who is 54. He added that he was interested in how the immune system worked and how it could be trained to identify and attack cancer cells.

In 1992, Sahin finished medical school and worked as a doctor for internal medicine and hematology and oncology at the University of Cologne for several years before transferring to the Saarland University Medical Center. There, he met Türeci, a medical student and the daughter of a doctor who had come to Germany from Istanbul.

A lecturer at the University of Mainz, Özlem Türeci is considered a pioneer in cancer immunotherapy. “Influenced by my father, who worked as a doctor, I could not imagine any other profession even when I was a young girl,” Türeci told the online website wissenschaftsjahr.de. “My father’s practice was in the family home. When we were kids, we would play among the patients. There was no strict separation between work and life in our home.”

Like her father, she wanted to help people. First, she thought of becoming a nun, she told the German magazine Impulse in 2011, but then she decided to go into medicine.

Türeci and Sahin married in 2002, when he was already working at the University Medical Center Mainz. Even on their wedding day, Sahin spent some time in the lab — both before the couple went to the registry office and again afterward.

Source: dw.com