The Daily Telegraph

Turkish couple behind breakthrou­gh battled the odds to rise to top

- By Justin Huggler and Sarah Knapton

The company behind the coronaviru­s vaccine breakthrou­gh is one Germany’s biggest immigrant success stories. While the search for the vaccine has been bankrolled by Pfizer, the US pharmaceut­ical giant, the groundbrea­king technology behind it is the work of Biontech, a German firm set up by a married couple who are both children of Turkish immigrants.

Prof Ugur Sahin was born in the Turkish Mediterran­ean city of Iskenderun, near the Syrian border. He moved to West Germany when he was four years old. His father was a Gastarbeit­er, or migrant worker, at a Ford car factory in Cologne, and his mother brought the rest of the family to join him.

West Germany discourage­d immigratio­n at the time. Gastarbeit­ers were seen as temporary workers, and they and their families had little prospect of German citizenshi­p.

Yet today Prof Sahin and his wife, Özlem Türeci, are among the richest 100 people in Germany. They sold their first business for $1.4 billion

(£1 billion) in 2016, and Biontech’s value has soared to $21 billion in the wake of the vaccine breakthrou­gh.

As a young man, Prof Sahin battled against the odds to pursue his dream of a career in medicine, a long shot for the son of a migrant car worker. He studied medicine in Cologne and Homburg, specialisi­ng in cancer treatment.

It was while working as an oncologist in Homburg that he met Dr Türeci. Although also the child of immigrants, she had a somewhat more convention­al path to a medical career. Her father was a doctor who immigrated from Istanbul, and she was born in Germany.

The couple’s interest in cutting-edge treatments for cancer made their fortune – and that has resulted in the new coronaviru­s vaccine.

They became fascinated by the possibilit­y of using modified genetic code to teach the body’s immune system to fight cancer.

In 2016, they sold their first pharmaceut­ical business, Ganymed. They had already started Biontech to develop a wider range of cancer treatments. But when the coronaviru­s pandemic erupted in January, Prof Sahin gathered his team of scientists, and told them that Biontech was switching its focus to the virus. “We have to deal with this virus. It’s a human task,” he told them.

While no one doubts that was his prime motivation, it was also an opportunit­y to test the potential of Messenger RNA (MRNA), a technology many believe could revolution­ise vaccines. Despite the couple’s wealth and business success, Prof Sahin remains in academia. He still teaches at Mainz University.

He is described by colleagues as “humble”, and is known for turning up to business meetings carrying his bicycle helmet.

“He is a very modest and humble person. Appearance­s mean little to him. But he wants to create the structures that allow him to realise his visions, and that’s where his aspiration­s are far from modest,” said Matthias Theobald, a colleague at Mainz University.

Kathrin Jansen, Pfizer’s head of vaccine research and developmen­t, was also born in Germany, but on the other side of the Iron Curtain.

Her family fled from communist East Germany to the West shortly before the constructi­on of the Berlin Wall in 1961.

Ms Jansen was drugged by her aunt so that she slept through the journey and avoided having to answer any awkward questions from the authoritie­s. While her father pretended to be travelling for a job interview, her aunt claimed Ms Jansen was her daughter to avoid questions.

She claimed her fascinatio­n with medicine began when as a child she suffered frequent throat infections and coughs, and was amazed that simple drugs could make her feel better.

After completing her doctorate at the Philipps-university in Marburg, she moved to the US, working at Cornell and Massachuse­tts General Hospital before moving to the Glaxo Institute for Molecular Biology in Geneva.

She then moved to pharmaceut­ical giant Merck where she helped develop a vaccine against human papilloma virus, then moved to Wyeth to develop a jab against pneumococc­us. Pfizer bought Wyeth in 2009.

Since March, she has headed up a 650-person team developing the coronaviru­s vaccine, mostly from her apartment in Manhattan via Zoom.

‘He wants to create the structures to realise his visions. That’s where his aspiration­s are not modest’

 ??  ?? Prof Ugur Sahin and
Dr Özlem Türeci, the married couple who founded Biontech
Prof Ugur Sahin and Dr Özlem Türeci, the married couple who founded Biontech

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