Ramón y Cajal, Santiago

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{{epname|Ramón y Cajal, Santiago}}
  
[[Image:Santiago Ramón y Cajal.png|thumb|right150px|Santiago Ramón y Cajal.]]
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[[Image: CajalCerebellum.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Ramón y Cajal’s beautiful and meticulously rendered drawings of neurons are still used in textbooks today.]]
  
'''Santiago Ramón y Cajal''' (May 1, 1852 – October 17, 1934) was a [[Spanish people|Spanish]] [[histology|histologist]] and [[physician]] who (along with [[Camillo Golgi]]) won the [[Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine]] in 1906 for establishing the [[neuron]] (or nerve cell) as the primary structural and functional unit of the [[nervous system]]. Ramón y Cajal’s proposal that neurons were discrete cells that communicated with each other via specialized junctions, or spaces, between cells, became known as the [[neuron doctrine]], now one of the central tenets of modern [[neuroscience]].
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'''Santiago Ramón y Cajal''' (May 1, 1852 – October 17, 1934) was a [[Spain|Spanish]] [[histology|histologist]] (study of [[tissue]]s) and [[physician]] who (along with [[Camillo Golgi]]) won the [[Nobel Prize]] in Physiology or Medicine in 1906 for establishing the [[neuron]] (or nerve cell) as the primary structural and functional unit of the [[nervous system]]. Ramón y Cajal provided definitive evidence that neurons are discrete cells that communicate with each other via specialized junctions, or spaces, between cells. His discovery became the basis for what is today known as [[the neuron doctrine]], one of the central tenets of modern [[neuroscience]].  
  
To observe the structure of individual neurons, Ramón y Cajal used [[Golgi's method|a silver staining method]] developed by Italian anatomist Camillo Golgi, who supported the prevailing view of the time that the nervous system was a reticulum, or a connected meshwork, rather than a system made up of discrete [[cell (biology)|cells]]. Convinced that the brain needed independent neurons to function, Ramón y Cajal persisted, modifying Golgi's technique until he obtained clear pictures of distinctly bounded nerve endings.
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To observe the structure of individual neurons, Ramón y Cajal used a silver staining method developed by [[Italy|Italian]] anatomist Camillo Golgi, who supported the prevailing view of the time that the nervous system was a connected meshwork rather than a system made up of separate cells. Convinced that the brain needed independent neurons to function as a dynamic system that was capable of learning and growth, Ramón y Cajal persisted, modifying Golgi's technique until he obtained clear pictures of distinctly bounded nerve endings.
  
[[Image: CajalCerebellum.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Ramón y Cajal’s beautiful and meticulously rendered drawings of neurons are still used in textbooks today.]]
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Although he became one of the founders of neuroscience, as a young man Ramón y Cajal wanted to be an artist, and vision would play a central role in his scientific contributions. Ramón y Cajal felt the most essential quality of a scientist was the ability to see clearly; according to Cajal, Golgi was actually seeing separate cells when he looked at the stains, but believed he was seeing a net because he fell prey to suggestion (Otis 2001). Thus, Ramón y Cajal joined the list of individuals in history who brought a fresh perspective to issues, confronting erroneous paradigms.
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Ramón y Cajal’s artistic leanings extended to the writing of fiction: one year before receiving the Nobel Prize, he published a [[science fiction]] collection called ''Vacation Stories'' ''(Cuentos de vacaciones)'' under the pen name “Dr. Bacteria.” These five stories, which tackle [[ethics]] in [[science]] and challenge established views on organized [[religion]] and social class, reveal their author to be a scientist who was deeply engaged with the larger social and ethical questions of scientific discovery.
  
Although he became one of the founders of neuroscience, as a young man Ramón y Cajal wanted to be an artist, and vision would play a central role in his scientific contribution. Ramón y Cajal felt the most essential quality of a scientist was the ability to see clearly: according to Cajal, Golgi was actually seeing separate cells when he looked at the stains, but believed he was seeing a net because he fell prey to suggestion (Otis 2001).
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== Biography ==
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The son of Justo Ramón and Antonia Cajal, Ramón y Cajal was born of Aragonese parents in Petilla de Aragón, a poor, rural enclave in northeastern [[Spain]]. As a child he was transferred between many different schools due to his unruly behavior and anti-authoritarian attitude. An extreme example of his precociousness and rebelliousness is his imprisonment at the age of eleven for destroying the town gate with a homemade cannon. He was an avid painter, artist, and gymnast, who preferred being out of doors rather than trapped in school memorizing lessons.
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However, Justo Ramón, who himself had escaped [[poverty]] by becoming first a [[surgery|surgeon]] and later a physician, was determined to make his son a doctor. Ramón y Cajal attended the medical school of Zaragoza, from which he graduated in 1873. Drafted into the Spanish army, he became a military doctor, with the rank of captain, and was sent first to the Carlist campaign and later to [[Cuba]] (where a nationalist uprising demanded independence from Spain). Ramón y Cajal returned to Spain in 1875, after nearly dying from [[malaria]] contracted while in Cuba. In 1879, he married Silveria Fañanás García, with whom he had seven children (two of whom died in childhood).  
  
Ramón y Cajal’s artistic leanings extended to the writing of fiction: one year before receiving the Nobel, he published a science-fiction collection called "Vacation Stories" (''Cuentos de vacaciones'') under the pen name "Dr. Bacteria." Tackling issues of ethics in science as well and challenging established views on organized religion and social class, the stories indicate a scientist engaged with the larger social and ethical questions of scientific discovery.  
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Ramón y Cajal secured a post as an assistant professor at Zaragoza teaching [[anatomy]] in 1879, and was appointed university professor at the more prestigious Universitat de València in 1881. In 1883, he was made chair of the anatomy department there. He later held professorships in both Barcelona and Madrid, remaining in the latter position for 30 years. He was Director of the Zaragoza Museum (1879), Director of the National Institute of Hygiene (1899), and founder of the ''Laboratorio de Investigaciones Biológicas'' (1922) (later renamed to the ''Instituto Cajal'', or Cajal Institute). Ramón y Cajal died in Madrid in 1934.
  
 
==Contributions to neuroscience==
 
==Contributions to neuroscience==
 
[[Image:Cajal-mi.jpg|200px|left|thumb|Ramón y Cajal in the lab.]]
 
[[Image:Cajal-mi.jpg|200px|left|thumb|Ramón y Cajal in the lab.]]
Before the neuron doctrine was accepted, it was widely believed that the nervous system was a reticulum, or a connected meshwork, rather than a system made up of discrete [[cell (biology)|cells]] (kandel ref).This theory, the [[reticular theory]], held that neurons' [[soma (biology)|somata]] mainly provided nourishment for the system (DeFelipe, 1998). Even after the [[cell theory]] was postulated in the 1830s, most scientists did not believe the theory applied to the brain or nerves.
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Since 1871, when German anatomist Josef von Gerlach had described the [[nervous system]] as a net of tangled cell branches, most neuroscientists had accepted the idea that [[neuron|nerve cells]] merged, forming a reticulum, or connected meshwork (Kandel et al. 2000). This theory, called the [[reticular theory]], held that neurons' somata (later identified as the bulbous ends of individual neurons) mainly provided nourishment for the system (DeFelipe 1999). Even after the [[cell theory]] was postulated in the 1830s, most scientists did not believe that it applied to the [[brain]] or nerves.  
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The initial prevalence of the reticular theory was due in part to an inadequate ability to visualize cells using [[microscope]]s, which were not developed enough to provide clear pictures of nerves. With the cell staining techniques of the day, a slice of neural tissue appeared under a microscope as a complex, tangled web whose individual cells were difficult to discern. Since neurons are involved in a large number of neural processes, an individual cell can be quite long and complex, and it can be difficult to find an individual cell when it is closely associated with many other cells.
  
The initial failure to accept the doctrine was due in part to inadequate ability to visualize cells using [[microscopes]], which were not developed enough to provide clear pictures of nerves.  With the [[staining (microscopy)|cell staining]] techniques of the day, a slice of neural tissue appeared under a microscope as a complex, tangled web and individual cells were difficult to make out.  Since neurons have a large number of [[neural process]]es, an individual cell can be quite long and complex, and it can be difficult to find an individual cell when it is closely associated with many other cells.  
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Thus, a major breakthrough occurred in the late 1800s when Ramón y Cajal used a technique developed by Golgi to visualize neurons. ''Golgi's method'' is a [[tissue|nervous tissue]] [[staining]] technique discovered in 1873 by Camillo Golgi, who found that by treating [[brain]] tissue with a silver chromate solution, a relatively small number of [[neuron]]s in the brain were darkly stained. For reasons still largely unknown today, the solution is absorbed by only a few cells, but they transport it to all of their branches so that their microstructure is revealed in extraordinary detail.
  
Thus, a major breakthrough for the neuron doctrine occurred in the late 1800s when Ramón y Cajal used a technique  developed by [[Camillo Golgi]] to visualize neurons. ''Golgi's method'' is a [[nervous tissue]] [[staining]] technique discovered by [[Italy|Italian]] [[physician]] and [[scientist]] [[Camillo Golgi]] (1843-1926) in [[1873]]. Golgi found that by treating [[brain]] tissue with a [[silver chromate]] solution, a relatively small number of [[neuron]]s in the brain were darkly stained.
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[[Image:GolgiStainedPyramidalCell.jpg|thumb|A human neocortical [[pyramidal neuron]] stained using the Golgi technique.]]
  
The cells in nervous tissue are densely packed and little information on their structures and interconnections can be obtained if all the cells are stained. Furthermore, its thin filamentary extensions—the [[axon]] and the [[dendrite]]s—are too slender and transparent to be seen with normal staining techniques. The Golgi stain is an extremely useful method for neuroanatomical investigations because, for reasons unknown, it stains a very small percentage of cells in a tissue, so one is able to see the complete microstructure of individual neurons without much overlap from other cells in the densely packed brain.Golgi's method stains a limited number of cells at random in their entirety. The mechanism by which this happens is still largely unknown.  
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Using [[Golgi's method]], Ramón y Cajal reached a very different position from the reticular theory supported by most neuroscientists, including Golgi himself. He postulated that the [[nervous system]] is made up of billions of separate neurons and that these cells are [[polarization|polarized]]. Ramón y Cajal suggested that rather than forming a continuous web, neurons communicate with each other via [[synapse|specialized junctions]] called ''[[synapse]]s'', a term that was coined by Charles Scott Sherrington in 1897.  
  
Based on his stains, Golgi concluded that nervous tissue was a continuous reticulum (or web) of interconnected [[cell (biology)|cell]]s much like those in the [[circulatory system]].Using [[Golgi's method]], Ramón y Cajal reached a very different conclusion. He postulated that the [[nervous system]] is made up of billions of separate [[neuron]]s and that these cells are [[polarization|polarized]]. Rather than forming a continuous web, Cajal suggested that neurons communicate with each other via [[synapse|specialized junctions]] called "synapses", a term that was coined by [[Charles Scott Sherrington|Sherrington]] in [[1897]]. This [[hypothesis]] became the basis of the [[neuron doctrine]], which states that the individual unit of the nervous system is a single neuron.  [[Electron microscope|Electron microscopy]] later showed that a [[cell membrane|plasma membrane]] completely enclosed each neuron, supporting Cajal's [[theory]], and weakening Golgi's reticular theory.
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Unbeknownst to Ramón y Cajal when he began his investigations, two scientists had already challenged the nerve net hypothesis: Wilhelm His (a scholar of neural development) and August Forel (a scholar of neural degeneration). Definitive evidence, however, could come only from clear pictures of distinctly bounded nerve endings. Ramón y Cajal, a skilled technician who modified Golgi’s techniques, provided that evidence with his studies of the [[bird]] retina and cerebellum in 1888-89.  
  
[[Image:GolgiStainedPyramidalCell.jpg|thumb|A human neocortical [[pyramidal neuron]] stained via [[Golgi's method|Golgi technique]].]]
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In 1891, Wilhelm Waldeyer, a German anatomist and supporter of Ramón y Cajal, coined the term ''neuron'' in a paper that outlined the neuron doctrine, and by the end of that year, most scientists had accepted that neurons were independent cells. [[Electron microscope|Electron microscopy]] later showed that a [[cell membrane|plasma membrane]] completely enclosed each neuron, supporting Cajal's findings and weakening Golgi's reticular theory.
  
For their technique and discovery respectively, Golgi and Ramón y Cajal shared the 1906 [[Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine]].  Golgi could not tell for certain that neurons were not connected, and in his acceptance speech he defended the reticular theory.  Ramón y Cajal, in ''his'' speech, contradicted that of Golgi and defended the now accepted neuron doctrine. A paper written in 1891 by [[Wilhelm von Waldeyer]], a supporter of Ramón y Cajal who coined the term ''neuron'', debunked the reticular theory and outlined the Neuron Doctrine.
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For their technique and discovery respectively, Golgi and Ramón y Cajal shared the 1906 [[Nobel Prize]] in Physiology or Medicine.
  
Ramón y Cajal also proposed that the way [[axon]]s grow is via a [[growth cone]] at their ends. He understood that neural cells could sense chemical signals that indicated a direction for growth, a process called [[chemotaxis]].
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==The relation between art and science in Ramón y Cajal's work==
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Ramón y Cajal's lifelong interest in [[painting]] and [[photography]] influenced his approach to scientific investigation. It was only when he began dissecting cadavers with his father (a physician and medical lab assistant) in 1868 that learning about [[anatomy]] became a visual experience, and Ramón y Cajal grew interested in science. In ''Advice for a Young Investigator'' (1897), Ramón y Cajal cites French naturalist and zoologist [[Georges Cuvier]], who claimed that the scientist needed to understand his own artistic conventions and ways of representing the world before he could begin to compare the forms of animals (Otis 2001).
  
==The relation between art and science in Ramón y Cajal's career==
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The gallery of images below represents a sampling of Ramón y Cajal's scientific illustrations, which continue to be used in neuroscience textbooks:
text
 
  
 
<gallery>
 
<gallery>
Image:CajalHippocampus.jpeg|Drawing of the neural circuitry of the rodent [[hippocampus]]. {{lang|fr|Histologie du Systeme Nerveux de l'Homme et des Vertebretes}}, Vols. 1 and 2. A. Maloine. Paris. 1911.
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Image:CajalHippocampus.jpeg|Drawing of the neural circuitry of the rodent [[hippocampus]] in ''Histologie du Systeme Nerveux de l'Homme et des Vertebretes'' (Paris, 1911).
Image:CajalCerebellum.jpg|Drawing of the cells of the chick [[cerebellum]], from "{{lang|es|Estructura de los centros nerviosos de las aves}}", Madrid, 1905.
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Image:CajalCerebellum.jpg|Drawing of the cells of the chick [[cerebellum]], from ''Estructura de los centros nerviosos de las aves'' (Madrid, 1905).
Image:SparrowTectum.jpg|Drawing of a section through the [[optic tectum]] of a sparrow, from "{{lang|es|Estructura de los centros nerviosos de las aves}}", Madrid, 1905.
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Image:SparrowTectum.jpg|Drawing of a section through the [[optic tectum]] of a sparrow, from ''Estructura de los centros nerviosos de las aves'' (Madrid, 1905).
Image:Cajal Retina.jpg|From "Structure of the Mammalian [[Retina]]" Madrid, 1900.
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Image:Cajal Retina.jpg|From ''Structure of the Mammalian Retina'' (Madrid, 1900).
Image:PurkinjeCell.jpg|Drawing of [[Purkinje cell]]s (A) and granule cells (B) from pigeon cerebellum by Santiago Ramón y Cajal, 1899. Instituto Santiago Ramón y Cajal, Madrid, Spain.
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Image:PurkinjeCell.jpg|Drawing of [[Purkinje cell]]s (A) and granule cells (B) from pigeon cerebellum (Madrid, 1899).
Image:Cajal-Retzius cell drawing by Cajal 1891.gif|Drawing of [[Cajal-Retzius cell]]s, 1891.
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Image:Cajal-Retzius cell drawing by Cajal 1891.gif|Drawing of [[Cajal-Retzius cell]]s (1891).
Image:Purkinje cell by Cajal.png|Drawing of a [[Purkinje cell]] in the [[cerebellum]] [[Cerebellar cortex|cortex]] done by Santiago Ramón y Cajal, clearly demonstrating the power of Golgi's staining method to reveal fine detail.
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Image:Purkinje cell by Cajal.png|Drawing of a [[Purkinje cell]] in the [[cerebellum]] [[Cerebellar cortex|cortex]], clearly demonstrating the power of Golgi's staining method to reveal fine detail.
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
  
==Ramón y Cajal as writer: ''Vacation Stories''==
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==Ramón y Cajal as a writer: ''Vacation Stories''==
In 1905, he published five science-fictional "Vacation Stories" under the pen name Dr. Bacteria.
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In 1905, Ramón y Cajal published ''Vacation Stories,'' a collection of five science-fiction tales culled from an original manuscript of twelve stories. Though the stories were written in 1885-86, the period immediately preceding his scientific breakthrough, Ramón y Cajal refrained from publishing them for nearly 20 years, perhaps fearing that their anti-establishment attitudes might jeopardize his scientific funding. The five tales treat what were then cutting-edge scientific and technological topics, such as bacteriology, artificial insemination, photography, and hypnosis. Ramón y Cajal teases out the ethical and social implications of these developments in an ornate and ironic prose style. As the title suggests, Cajal's fiction allowed him to take a “vacation” from the conventions of scientific writing so that he could ponder the future of science (Otis 2007).
 
 
Though written in 1885-86, the period immediately preceding his scientific breakthrough, the stories were edited extensively in 1905, so that they could be associated w/ a Spanish literary movement called the Generation of 1898. A group of [[novel]]ists, [[poet]]s, [[essay]]ists, and [[philosopher]]s that included [[Azorín]], [[Pío Baroja]], and [[Miguel de Unamuno]], the Generation of 1898 focused on the individual will as a mean’s to regenerate Spain, perceived of as on a slow cultural decline since the mid-17th century, and called for political and educational reform.
 
 
 
== Biography ==
 
The son of Justo Ramón and  Antonia Cajal, Ramón y Cajal was born of Aragonese parents in [[Petilla de Aragón]], a poor, rural enclave in [[Aragon]], in northeastern [[Spain]]. As a child he was transferred between many different schools due to his unruly behaviour and [[Authoritarianism|anti-authoritarian]] attitude. An extreme example of his precociousness and rebelliousness is his imprisonment at the age of eleven for destroying the town gate with a homemade [[cannon]]. He was an avid painter, artist, and [[gymnast]], who preferred being out of doors rather than trapped in school memorizing lessons.  
 
  
However, Justo Ramón, who himself had escaped poverty by becoming first a surgeon and later a physician, was determined to make his son a physician. Ramón y Cajal attended the medical school of [[Zaragoza]], from which he graduated in 1873. A mandatory draft made him a military doctor, with the rank of caption, in the Spanish Army; he was sent him to first the Carlist campaign and later to Cuba (where uprising of Cuban nationalists demanding independence from Spain) served as a medical [[officer (armed forces)|officer]] in the [[Spanish Army]], where he contracted [[malaria]]. After returning to Spain, he married Silveria Fañanás García, with whom he had seven children (two of whom died in childhood).  
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''Vacation Stories,'' was edited extensively in 1905, in part so that it would be associated with a literary movement called the ''Generation of 1898''. A group of Spanish [[novel]]ists, [[poet]]s, [[essay]]ists, and [[philosopher]]s that included [[Azorín]], [[Pío Baroja]], and [[Miguel de Unamuno]], the Generation of 1898 focused on the individual will as a means to regenerate Spain, perceived of as on a steady cultural decline since the mid-seventeenth century; its members also called for political and educational reform. An ardent patriot, Ramón y Cajal wrote articles for liberal journals and identified as a socialist. His [[patriotism]], however, extended to an imperialist attitude; he saw science as they key to recovering Spain’s lost empire, believing that bacteriologists would attack the microbes that prevented Europeans from settling in [[Africa]] (Otis, 2001).
  
Ramón y Cajal secured a post as an assistant professor at Zaragoza teaching anatomy in 1879, and was appointed as a [[university]] [[professor]] at [[Universitat de València|Valencia]] in 1881. In 1883, he was made chair of the anatomy department there. He later held professorships in both [[Barcelona]] and Madrid, remaining in the latter position for 30 years. He was Director of the Zaragoza Museum (1879), Director of the National Institute of Hygiene (1899), and founder of the {{lang|es|''Laboratorio de Investigaciones Biológicas''}} (1922) (later renamed to the {{lang|es|''Instituto Cajal''}}, or [[Cajal Institute]]). Ramón y Cajal died in Madrid in 1934.
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''Vacation Stories'' was not Ramón y Cajal's only foray into fiction: he had previously written two novels, but both manuscripts have been lost.
  
 
== Selected works ==
 
== Selected works ==
Ramón y Cajal published over 200 scientific texts and articles, many of which were translated into [[French]] and [[German language|German]], though — lamented the isolation of sp scientists //. Among his most notable publications are works of memoir and fiction.
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Ramón y Cajal published over 200 scientific texts and articles, many of which were translated into [[French language|French]] and [[German language|German]]. Among his most notable publications are works of memoir and fiction:
  
*1894-1904: ''Histology of the Nervous System of Man and Vertebrates'' 2 vols. (''Textura del Sistema Nervioso del Hombre y los Vertebrados'')
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*1894-1904. ''Histology of the Nervous System of Man and Vertebrates'', 2 vols. ''(Textura del Sistema Nervioso del Hombre y los Vertebrados)''
*1897: Advice for a Young Investigator (''Reglas y consejos sobre le investigación cientifica'')
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*1897. ''Advice for a Young Investigator'' ''(Reglas y consejos sobre le investigación cientifica)''  
*1905: ''Vacation Stories'' (''Cuentos de vacaciones'')
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*1905. ''Vacation Stories'' ''(Cuentos de vacaciones)''
*1913-1914: ''Degeneration and regeneration of the nervous system'' 2 vols. (''Estudios sobre la degeneración y regeneración del sistema nervioso'')
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*1913-1914. ''Degeneration and regeneration of the nervous system'', 2 vols. ''(Estudios sobre la degeneración y regeneración del sistema nervioso)''
*1917: Recollections of My Life (''Recuerdos de mi vida'')
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*1917. ''Recollections of My Life'' ''(Recuerdos de mi vida)''
*1918: ''Manual of general [[pathology|pathological]] [[anatomy]]'' (''Manual técnico de anatomía patológica'')
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*1918. ''Manual of general pathological anatomy'' ''(Manual técnico de anatomía patológica)''  
*1921: ''Cafe Conversations'' (''Charlas de Café'')
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*1921. ''Cafe Conversations'' ''(Charlas de Café)''
*1934: ''The World From an Eighty-Year-Old's Point of View'' (''El mundo visto a los ochenta años'')
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*1934. ''The World From an Eighty-Year-Old's Point of View'' ''(El mundo visto a los ochenta años)''
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
*Everdell, W.R. 1998. ''The First Moderns''. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226224805
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*Bentivoglio, M. 1998. [http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/articles/cajal/ Life and discoveries of Santiago Ramón y Cajal] ''Nobelprize.org''. Retrieved February 2, 2008.  
*Ramón y Cajal, S. 1937. ''Recuerdos de mi Vida''. Cambridge: MIT Press. ISBN 8420622907
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*DeFelipe, J. 1999. Cajal. In R. A. Wilson and F. C. Keil, ''MIT Encyclopedia of the Cognitive Sciences''. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. ISBN 026273124X.
*Ramón y Cajal, S. 1999 (1897). ''Advice for a Young Investigator''. Trans. N. Swanson and L.W. Swanson. Cambridge: MIT Press. ISBN 0262681501
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*Everdell, W.R. 1998. ''The First Moderns''. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226224805.
*Ramón y Cajal, S. 2001 (1905). ''Vacation Stories: Five Science Fiction Tales''. Trans. L. Otis. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press.
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*Kandel E. R., J. H. Schwartz, and T. M. Jessell. 2000. ''Principles of Neural Science'', 4th ed. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0838577016.
*[[Eric Richard Kandel|Kandel E.R.]], Schwartz, J.H., Jessell, T.M. 2000. ''[[Principles of Neural Science]]'', 4th ed., Page 23. McGraw-Hill, New York.
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*Otis, L. 2007. [http://www.lablit.com/article/226 Dr. Bacteria: The strange science fiction of Santiago Ramón y Cajal] ''LabLit''. Retrieved February 2, 2008.
DeFelipe J. 1998. [http://www.psu.edu/nasa/cajal.htm Cajal]. ''MIT Encyclopedia of the Cognitive Sciences'', MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass.
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*Otis, L. 2001. Introduction to ''Vacation Stories: Five Science Fiction Tales'' by Santiago Ramón y Cajal. Trans. L. Otis. Urbana and Chicago, IL: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 025207355X.
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*Ramón y Cajal, S. 1999. ''Advice for a Young Investigator''. Trans. N. Swanson and L.W. Swanson. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. ISBN 0262681501.
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*Ramón y Cajal, S. 1937. ''Recuerdos de mi Vida''. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. ISBN 8420622907.
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
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All links retrieved December 22, 2022.
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*[https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/medicine/1906/cajal/facts/ Santiago Ramón y Cajal: The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1906]
  
*[http://nobelprize.org/medicine/laureates/1906/index.html The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1906]
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{{Template:Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine Laureates 1901-1925}}
*[http://nobelprize.org/medicine/articles/cajal/ Life and discoveries of Cajal]
 
*[http://www.pyreneesguide.com/articles.asp?cID=56&sID=395&aID=1449 Ramon y Cajal, an Aragonese Nobel Prize]
 
  
{{credit|Santiago_Ramon_y_Cajal|136290081}}
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{{credit|Santiago_Ramon_y_Cajal|136290081|Golgi's_method|136607188|Neuron_doctrine|138649539}}
 
[[Category:Life sciences]]
 
[[Category:Life sciences]]
 
[[Category:Biography]]
 
[[Category:Biography]]
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[[Category:Biologists]]
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[[Category:Cell biology]]

Latest revision as of 03:22, 23 December 2022

Ramón y Cajal’s beautiful and meticulously rendered drawings of neurons are still used in textbooks today.

Santiago Ramón y Cajal (May 1, 1852 – October 17, 1934) was a Spanish histologist (study of tissues) and physician who (along with Camillo Golgi) won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1906 for establishing the neuron (or nerve cell) as the primary structural and functional unit of the nervous system. Ramón y Cajal provided definitive evidence that neurons are discrete cells that communicate with each other via specialized junctions, or spaces, between cells. His discovery became the basis for what is today known as the neuron doctrine, one of the central tenets of modern neuroscience.

To observe the structure of individual neurons, Ramón y Cajal used a silver staining method developed by Italian anatomist Camillo Golgi, who supported the prevailing view of the time that the nervous system was a connected meshwork rather than a system made up of separate cells. Convinced that the brain needed independent neurons to function as a dynamic system that was capable of learning and growth, Ramón y Cajal persisted, modifying Golgi's technique until he obtained clear pictures of distinctly bounded nerve endings.

Although he became one of the founders of neuroscience, as a young man Ramón y Cajal wanted to be an artist, and vision would play a central role in his scientific contributions. Ramón y Cajal felt the most essential quality of a scientist was the ability to see clearly; according to Cajal, Golgi was actually seeing separate cells when he looked at the stains, but believed he was seeing a net because he fell prey to suggestion (Otis 2001). Thus, Ramón y Cajal joined the list of individuals in history who brought a fresh perspective to issues, confronting erroneous paradigms.

Ramón y Cajal’s artistic leanings extended to the writing of fiction: one year before receiving the Nobel Prize, he published a science fiction collection called Vacation Stories (Cuentos de vacaciones) under the pen name “Dr. Bacteria.” These five stories, which tackle ethics in science and challenge established views on organized religion and social class, reveal their author to be a scientist who was deeply engaged with the larger social and ethical questions of scientific discovery.

Biography

The son of Justo Ramón and Antonia Cajal, Ramón y Cajal was born of Aragonese parents in Petilla de Aragón, a poor, rural enclave in northeastern Spain. As a child he was transferred between many different schools due to his unruly behavior and anti-authoritarian attitude. An extreme example of his precociousness and rebelliousness is his imprisonment at the age of eleven for destroying the town gate with a homemade cannon. He was an avid painter, artist, and gymnast, who preferred being out of doors rather than trapped in school memorizing lessons.

However, Justo Ramón, who himself had escaped poverty by becoming first a surgeon and later a physician, was determined to make his son a doctor. Ramón y Cajal attended the medical school of Zaragoza, from which he graduated in 1873. Drafted into the Spanish army, he became a military doctor, with the rank of captain, and was sent first to the Carlist campaign and later to Cuba (where a nationalist uprising demanded independence from Spain). Ramón y Cajal returned to Spain in 1875, after nearly dying from malaria contracted while in Cuba. In 1879, he married Silveria Fañanás García, with whom he had seven children (two of whom died in childhood).

Ramón y Cajal secured a post as an assistant professor at Zaragoza teaching anatomy in 1879, and was appointed university professor at the more prestigious Universitat de València in 1881. In 1883, he was made chair of the anatomy department there. He later held professorships in both Barcelona and Madrid, remaining in the latter position for 30 years. He was Director of the Zaragoza Museum (1879), Director of the National Institute of Hygiene (1899), and founder of the Laboratorio de Investigaciones Biológicas (1922) (later renamed to the Instituto Cajal, or Cajal Institute). Ramón y Cajal died in Madrid in 1934.

Contributions to neuroscience

Ramón y Cajal in the lab.

Since 1871, when German anatomist Josef von Gerlach had described the nervous system as a net of tangled cell branches, most neuroscientists had accepted the idea that nerve cells merged, forming a reticulum, or connected meshwork (Kandel et al. 2000). This theory, called the reticular theory, held that neurons' somata (later identified as the bulbous ends of individual neurons) mainly provided nourishment for the system (DeFelipe 1999). Even after the cell theory was postulated in the 1830s, most scientists did not believe that it applied to the brain or nerves.

The initial prevalence of the reticular theory was due in part to an inadequate ability to visualize cells using microscopes, which were not developed enough to provide clear pictures of nerves. With the cell staining techniques of the day, a slice of neural tissue appeared under a microscope as a complex, tangled web whose individual cells were difficult to discern. Since neurons are involved in a large number of neural processes, an individual cell can be quite long and complex, and it can be difficult to find an individual cell when it is closely associated with many other cells.

Thus, a major breakthrough occurred in the late 1800s when Ramón y Cajal used a technique developed by Golgi to visualize neurons. Golgi's method is a nervous tissue staining technique discovered in 1873 by Camillo Golgi, who found that by treating brain tissue with a silver chromate solution, a relatively small number of neurons in the brain were darkly stained. For reasons still largely unknown today, the solution is absorbed by only a few cells, but they transport it to all of their branches so that their microstructure is revealed in extraordinary detail.

A human neocortical pyramidal neuron stained using the Golgi technique.

Using Golgi's method, Ramón y Cajal reached a very different position from the reticular theory supported by most neuroscientists, including Golgi himself. He postulated that the nervous system is made up of billions of separate neurons and that these cells are polarized. Ramón y Cajal suggested that rather than forming a continuous web, neurons communicate with each other via specialized junctions called synapses, a term that was coined by Charles Scott Sherrington in 1897.

Unbeknownst to Ramón y Cajal when he began his investigations, two scientists had already challenged the nerve net hypothesis: Wilhelm His (a scholar of neural development) and August Forel (a scholar of neural degeneration). Definitive evidence, however, could come only from clear pictures of distinctly bounded nerve endings. Ramón y Cajal, a skilled technician who modified Golgi’s techniques, provided that evidence with his studies of the bird retina and cerebellum in 1888-89.

In 1891, Wilhelm Waldeyer, a German anatomist and supporter of Ramón y Cajal, coined the term neuron in a paper that outlined the neuron doctrine, and by the end of that year, most scientists had accepted that neurons were independent cells. Electron microscopy later showed that a plasma membrane completely enclosed each neuron, supporting Cajal's findings and weakening Golgi's reticular theory.

For their technique and discovery respectively, Golgi and Ramón y Cajal shared the 1906 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.

The relation between art and science in Ramón y Cajal's work

Ramón y Cajal's lifelong interest in painting and photography influenced his approach to scientific investigation. It was only when he began dissecting cadavers with his father (a physician and medical lab assistant) in 1868 that learning about anatomy became a visual experience, and Ramón y Cajal grew interested in science. In Advice for a Young Investigator (1897), Ramón y Cajal cites French naturalist and zoologist Georges Cuvier, who claimed that the scientist needed to understand his own artistic conventions and ways of representing the world before he could begin to compare the forms of animals (Otis 2001).

The gallery of images below represents a sampling of Ramón y Cajal's scientific illustrations, which continue to be used in neuroscience textbooks:

Ramón y Cajal as a writer: Vacation Stories

In 1905, Ramón y Cajal published Vacation Stories, a collection of five science-fiction tales culled from an original manuscript of twelve stories. Though the stories were written in 1885-86, the period immediately preceding his scientific breakthrough, Ramón y Cajal refrained from publishing them for nearly 20 years, perhaps fearing that their anti-establishment attitudes might jeopardize his scientific funding. The five tales treat what were then cutting-edge scientific and technological topics, such as bacteriology, artificial insemination, photography, and hypnosis. Ramón y Cajal teases out the ethical and social implications of these developments in an ornate and ironic prose style. As the title suggests, Cajal's fiction allowed him to take a “vacation” from the conventions of scientific writing so that he could ponder the future of science (Otis 2007).

Vacation Stories, was edited extensively in 1905, in part so that it would be associated with a literary movement called the Generation of 1898. A group of Spanish novelists, poets, essayists, and philosophers that included Azorín, Pío Baroja, and Miguel de Unamuno, the Generation of 1898 focused on the individual will as a means to regenerate Spain, perceived of as on a steady cultural decline since the mid-seventeenth century; its members also called for political and educational reform. An ardent patriot, Ramón y Cajal wrote articles for liberal journals and identified as a socialist. His patriotism, however, extended to an imperialist attitude; he saw science as they key to recovering Spain’s lost empire, believing that bacteriologists would attack the microbes that prevented Europeans from settling in Africa (Otis, 2001).

Vacation Stories was not Ramón y Cajal's only foray into fiction: he had previously written two novels, but both manuscripts have been lost.

Selected works

Ramón y Cajal published over 200 scientific texts and articles, many of which were translated into French and German. Among his most notable publications are works of memoir and fiction:

  • 1894-1904. Histology of the Nervous System of Man and Vertebrates, 2 vols. (Textura del Sistema Nervioso del Hombre y los Vertebrados)
  • 1897. Advice for a Young Investigator (Reglas y consejos sobre le investigación cientifica)
  • 1905. Vacation Stories (Cuentos de vacaciones)
  • 1913-1914. Degeneration and regeneration of the nervous system, 2 vols. (Estudios sobre la degeneración y regeneración del sistema nervioso)
  • 1917. Recollections of My Life (Recuerdos de mi vida)
  • 1918. Manual of general pathological anatomy (Manual técnico de anatomía patológica)
  • 1921. Cafe Conversations (Charlas de Café)
  • 1934. The World From an Eighty-Year-Old's Point of View (El mundo visto a los ochenta años)

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Bentivoglio, M. 1998. Life and discoveries of Santiago Ramón y Cajal Nobelprize.org. Retrieved February 2, 2008.
  • DeFelipe, J. 1999. Cajal. In R. A. Wilson and F. C. Keil, MIT Encyclopedia of the Cognitive Sciences. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. ISBN 026273124X.
  • Everdell, W.R. 1998. The First Moderns. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226224805.
  • Kandel E. R., J. H. Schwartz, and T. M. Jessell. 2000. Principles of Neural Science, 4th ed. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0838577016.
  • Otis, L. 2007. Dr. Bacteria: The strange science fiction of Santiago Ramón y Cajal LabLit. Retrieved February 2, 2008.
  • Otis, L. 2001. Introduction to Vacation Stories: Five Science Fiction Tales by Santiago Ramón y Cajal. Trans. L. Otis. Urbana and Chicago, IL: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 025207355X.
  • Ramón y Cajal, S. 1999. Advice for a Young Investigator. Trans. N. Swanson and L.W. Swanson. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. ISBN 0262681501.
  • Ramón y Cajal, S. 1937. Recuerdos de mi Vida. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. ISBN 8420622907.

External links

All links retrieved December 22, 2022.


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