ChainEFloreyHWGardnerADHeatleyNGJenningsMAOrr-EwingJSandersAG. Penicillin as a therapeutic agent. Lancet1940;ii:226–8.
2.
ClutterbuckPWLovellRRaistrickH. The formation from glucose by a member of the Penicillium chrysogenum series of a pigment, an alkali-soluble protein and penicillin - the antibacterial substance of Fleming. Biochem J1932;26:1907–18.
3.
BornsteinS. Action of penicillin on enterococci and other streptococci. J Bacteriol1940;39:383–7.
4.
ReidRD. A Study of the Bactericidal, Bacteriolytic or Inhibitory Substance Produced by Molds and some Factors which Influence its Production. MS thesis, 1931, Pennsylvania State College.
5.
FlemingA. On the antibacterial action of cultures of a Penicillium with special reference to their use in the isolation of B. influenzae. Br J Exper Pathol, 1929;10:226–36.
6.
WainwrightM. Fleming's early search for antibiotics other than penicillin. Soc Gen Microbiol Quart1993;18:46–7.
7.
WainwrightMSwanHT. C.G. Paine and the earliest surviving clinical records of penicillin therapy. Med Hist1986;30:42–56.
8.
ReidRD. A study of the bactericidal, bacteriolytic or inhibitory substance produced by some moulds and some factors which influence its production. J Bacteriol1933;25:31–2.
9.
ReidRD. Some observations on the ability of a mold, or its metabolic products to inhibit bacterial growth. J Bacteriol1934;27:28.
10.
WainwrightM. The mystery on the plate: Fleming's discovery and contribution to the early development of penicillin. J Med Biog1993;1:59–65.
11.
ReidRD. Some properties of a bacterial-inhibitory substance produced by a mold. J Bacteriol1935;29:215–21.
12.
HobbyG. Penicillin - Meeting the Challenge.New Haven: Yale University Press, 1985.
13.
RamsbottomJ. The uses of fungi. Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, Blackpool, 1936: 189–218.