Carl Cori and Gerty Cori elucidated basic biochemical mechanisms involved in the utilization of energy by muscle and liver, first at Roswell Park Cancer Institute and then at Washington University. In 1929, they formulated the Cori cycle, the process by which glycogen is converted to glucose in liver and is then reconverted to glycogen in muscle. They later found that glycogen breakdown yielded glucose-1-phosphate (Cori ester) and lactate, key intermediates in the cycle; they also established that lactic acid provided the energy employed in muscle contraction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHermann (Hugh) Blaschko was a biochemical pharmacologist best known for discovering how adrenaline (epinephrine), noradrenaline (norepinephrine), and dopamine were synthesized, stored, and metabolized in adrenomedullary cells and sympathetic nerves. Blaschko's work not only supported the validity of the concept of neurochemical synaptic transmission but he also made fundamental contributions to the development of drugs used in clinical medicine to treat diseases such as depression, hypertension, and Parkinson's Disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRobert Furchgott was first noted for research on drug-receptor theory, autonomic neuroeffector mechanisms, and vascular pharmacology/physiology. His studies on drug-receptor interactions provided important knowledge about the properties of drug receptors long before methodologies were developed to study them directly. However, Furchgott achieved an enduring legacy for recognizing the importance of endothelial cells for the relaxation of vascular smooth muscle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis article encapsulates the career of Joshua Burn, whose work encouraged new lines of experimentation and paved the way for fundamental advances in our knowledge of the autonomic nervous system. His legacy also endures in his efforts as Department Chairman to oversee a very supportive environment which led to the development of many successful scientists. By producing a body of work that enabled the discipline of pharmacology to contribute in a major way to the advancement of clinical medicine, Joshua Burn stands out as a unique figure in the annals of true scientific pioneers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Biogr
November 2017
The life and careers of Cecile, Marthe and Marguerite Vogt are chronicled in this article during an era where women were not readily accepted in the upper echelons of academia. By exploring important questions, these women made major contributions to the broad base of scientific knowledge which impacted the fields of neurobiology in both the central and peripheral nervous systems, infectious disease, and oncogenesis. As a result, each was considered the elite of her respective field and achieved an enduring legacy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlfred Gilman was best known for his co-authorship with Louis Goodman of the seminal textbook on pharmacology The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics in 1941. The book made the discipline of pharmacology relevant to clinical medicine by providing a link between the basic medical sciences and the practice of medicine. Gilman was also instrumental in establishing the use of chemotherapy in the treatment of cancer and made important contributions in areas related to renal function, acid-base balance, and diuretics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Med Hist Adriat
August 2016
While scientists were always cognizant of the fact that they must be objective about the questions they ask of nature, there was a time when they were less willing to consider the diverse views that could be contributed by female participation. Undervalued in terms of their intellect, ambition, and curiosity, women found it difficult to compete for and/or retain a research post, particularly when they married. As a result, many women undaunted by existing convention had to work without remuneration or were financially supported by colleagues and/ or relatives.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis article revisits the life and times of Otto Krayer, a gifted scientist, teacher and administrator. His unique contributions to the discipline of pharmacology and to the biomedical sciences are chronicled in the wake of the political upheaval that crippled German science during the 1930s. The anti-scientific attitude that pervaded Germany at the time led to the exile of Krayer and many other eminent scientists.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe present study was undertaken to examine the factors that regulate rat serum (RS)- and nerve growth factor (NGF)-induced differentiation in a rat parotid acinar cell line. RS elicited extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK1/ERK2) activation within 5min, while cyclic AMP (cAMP) levels transiently rose after 6hr. RS also elicited a rise in amylase mRNA levels within 30min, which preceded the rise in amylase protein levels.
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