The 100th anniversary of the shared first Nobel prize in neuroscience by Camillo Golgi and Ramon y Cajal invites reappraisal of the merits of the arguments adduced by these two combative scientists in the light of contemporary knowledge. Guided by cogent reasons for reluctance in accepting the inviolable polarity principle of the neuron doctrine and concern for explaining cerebral recovery of function, Golgi joined the 'reticularists' of his generation. Modern observations of axo-axonic and dendro-dendritic synapses, gap-junction interconnections, rules for the direction and mode of analog or impulse conduction, the myriad diversity of ion channels and gating principles and the complexities of synaptic plasticity have eclipsed the polarized neuron doctrine explanations of reflex physiology and the 'fixed and immutable' connections successfully championed by Cajal. Without violating the cell theory, expanded modes of neuronal and glial communication have encompassed reticularist notions and provided insight into the long-term changes underlying synaptic and extra-synaptic neural patterns. Both laureates espoused operative principles that have survived in different modes and distinctive temporal domains. Together, they reflect the roots of our contemporary understanding of neural interaction.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.brainresbull.2006.11.016 | DOI Listing |
Anat Rec (Hoboken)
October 2024
Department of Anatomy, Jagiellonian University Medical College, Krakow, Poland.
The nervous system is distinctive as compared to other tissue systems in human body owing to intricate structural organization. Histological studies played a key role in unveiling complex details of nervous tissue. However, the process of developing suitable staining method for nerve cells was arduous and spanned across almost half a century.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Neuroanat
February 2024
Laboratory of Cellular Neuroscience and Plasticity, Universidad Pablo de Olavide, Seville, Spain.
This paper reviews the importance of Cajal's neuronal theory (the Neuron Doctrine) and the origin and importance of the idea of brain plasticity that emerges from this theory. We first comment on the main Cajal's discoveries that gave rise and confirmed his Neuron Doctrine: the improvement of staining techniques, his approach to morphological laws, the concepts of dynamic polarisation, neurogenesis and neurotrophic theory, his first discoveries of the nerve cell as an independent cell, his research on degeneration and regeneration and his fight against reticularism. Second, we review Cajal's ideas on brain plasticity and the years in which they were published, to finally focus on the debate on the origin of the term plasticity and its conceptual meaning, and the originality of Cajal's proposal compared to those of other authors of the time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Adv
December 2023
Translational Neurotechnology Laboratory, Department of Neurosurgery, Klinikum rechts der Isar, Technical University of Munich, Germany.
Modern neuroscience has seen the rise of a population-doctrine that represents cognitive variables using geometrical structures in activity space. Representational geometry does not, however, account for how individual neurons implement these representations. Leveraging the principle of sparse coding, we present a framework to dissect representational geometry into biologically interpretable components that retain links to single neurons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHist Philos Life Sci
October 2023
Department of Philosophy, University of California, San Diego; La Jolla, CA, 92093-0119, USA.
The neuron doctrine, according to which nerves consist of discontinuous neurons, presented investigators with the challenge of determining what activities occurred between them or between them and muscles. One group of researchers, dubbed the sparks, viewed the electrical current in one neuron as inducing a current in the next neuron or in muscles. For them there was no gap between the activities of neurons or neurons and muscles that required filling with a new type of activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurophysiol
July 2023
Department of Pulmonary Medicine, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, United States.
In 1998, I was asked by the American Physiological Society to review a book written by Dr. Michael de Burgh Daly, . Inspired by this work, I came to appreciate how researchers in the later stages of their careers and who provide a detailed review of their experimental approach might effectively contribute to science, especially to the benefit of young scientists (Yu J.
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