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Life Style / Technology

Mold used by Fleming to make penicillin sells for $14,597

Published: 01 Mar 2017 - 05:49 pm | Last Updated: 01 Nov 2021 - 01:11 pm
rofessor Alexander Fleming, holder of the Chair of Bacteriology at London University, who first discovered the mould Penicillin Notatum. Here in his laboratory at St Mary's, Paddington, London. (Wikimedia Commons)

rofessor Alexander Fleming, holder of the Chair of Bacteriology at London University, who first discovered the mould Penicillin Notatum. Here in his laboratory at St Mary's, Paddington, London. (Wikimedia Commons)

Associated Press

LONDON:  The international auction house Bonham's says it has sold a small, patchy disc of mold for $14,597.

The off-white, nearly 90-year-old swatch of microbes has a rather extraordinary history: it was first created by Alexander Fleming to make penicillin, a revolutionary discovery that brought the world its first antibiotic. Bonham's sold the mold Wednesday during an auction in London.

The germs are preserved in a glass case and feature an inscription by Fleming on the back, identifying it as "the mould that first made penicillin."

That, however, may be stretching the truth; Fleming likely made dozens of the mold mementos.

Matthew Haley, director of books and manuscripts at Bonham's, said Fleming often sent the samples out to dignitaries including the Pope and Marlene Dietrich as "a kind of holy relic."