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Purkyně and Valentin on Ciliary Motion: An Early Investigation in Morphological Physiology
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2009
Extract
Ciliary motion refers to the activity of cilia, which are hairlike structures protruding from the surface of certain epithelial cells widely found in the animal kingdom. The main function of the currents produced by ciliary beating is the moving of fluid and small particles over the ciliated surface. It is now more clearly recognized that the study of cilia is contributing to the fundamental understanding of contractility and in this way is also helping to elucidate the mechanisms associated with muscular contraction, amoeboid and intracellular movements.
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References
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25 Ibid. The publication itself was dedicated to Baron Altenstein, the minister responsible for ecclesiastical, educational and medical affairs in Prussia, and the famous Alexander Humboldt, and it may, perhaps, be of more than passing interest to mention the circumstances in which the dedication came to be written. Of course, Purkyně had good reasons for his long-held intention to dedicate an important piece of work to Altenstein. (See Purkyně's letter to Altenstein (30 November 1834) inquiring whether the minister would accept the dedication (Deutsches Zentralarchiv, Merseburg).) In the office of the Berlin ministry Purkyně found a sympathetic reception for his research projects and he was clearly hoping for more in connection with his plans to set up an experimental physiological institute. Valentin as a Jew, who was not willing to resort to baptism, was fully aware that he was barred from holding a professorship in a Prussian university. Nevertheless, he might have entertained some hopes that with the possible help of an understanding minister and the direct backing of an internationally renowned liberal-minded scientist he would in the end break through the barrier and obtain an appointment. Valentin wrote to Altenstein the day after the dedication had been accepted (19 December 1834): “Wenn ich äussere Umstände halber nicht in die Reihe der Universitätslehrer eintreten kann und darf, um so ebenfalls des Glückes geniessen zu können, Ew. Excellenz gnädigster Huld und väterlicher Protektion unmittelbar nahe zu treten, so ergreife ich doch mit inniger Freude die Gelegenheit es öffentlich zeigen zu dürfen, dass ich die durch Ew. Excellenz hohe Güte auch auf mich sich erstreckende Beförderung alles wissenschaftlichen Strebens mit einigem Danke anerkenne.” (From a typewritten copy, Deutsches Zentralarchiv, Merseburg.) Valentin was, apparently, prepared to forsake even the possibility of having a chair in physiology of his own in Bern, which was offered to him in 1836, for the post of an extraordinarius at the side of Purkyně in Breslau or Müller in Berlin (see Hintzsche, E., op. cit. (5), 27–29Google Scholar). In fact, due to the publication Valentin was able to meet Altenstein (see Altenstein's letter to Purkyně in which the minister expresses his thanks for the copy of the book, Deutsches Zentralarchiv, Merseburg). But neither this acquaintance nor Humboldt's influence were able to overcome Prussian state policy in this matter, and even Purkyně some years later largely concurred. (See draft of Purkyně's answer to the Prussian authorities requesting him to offer his view on the admittance of non-baptized Jews to professorships, Literární archiv Památníku národního písemnictví, Prague, 29K 49/52). In the end Valentin went to Bern to become an Ordinarius and he remained there until his death (1883).
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30 Ibid.
31 L. Hill writes clearly: “Purkinje and Valentine [sic] observed, says Sharpey, that watery infusions of opium, belladonna, capsicum, catechu, aloes, musk, gum arabic, acetate of morphia, nitrate of strychnia had no effect on the cilia. Movement was arrested by a 10 per cent hydrocyanic acid solution, by acid, alkali, and salt in abnormal concentration, and by a certain concentration of alcohol, ether, sugar, empyrheumatic oil, creosote, muriate of baryta, sulphate of quinine, infusions of pyrethrum, and muriate of veratrum.” The Lancet, ccxv (2) (1928), 803–804.Google Scholar
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33 Op. cit. (13). Müller was doubtful whether Purkyně's and Valentin's experiments really proved that nervous activity does not affect ciliary movement (see Arch. Anat. Physiol. wiss. Med. (Müller), (1836), clv-clvii). It is interesting to note what modern research has to say on the control of ciliary activity: “It is difficult to be certain whether there are any metazoan cilia which are without any form of control, though there may be some cilia with cleansing or respiratory functions that are continuously active … In no case can we be certain of the means by which the control of cilia is exerted.” Sleigh, , op. cit. (2), 121, 124.Google Scholar
34 Opera omnia, i, chapter 9.
35 Rivera, , op. cit. (3), 12.Google Scholar
36 Opera omnia, ii, 153.Google Scholar Valentin in his answer to Mayer points out that ciliary motion was observable with microscopes magnifying 80–120 times and even with the unaided eye. See Repertorium Anat. Physiol (Valentin), i (1837), 150.Google Scholar
37 Hughes, , op. cit. (10), 12.Google Scholar
38 Kraft was a pupil of P. Grützner who was close to Valentin (see “Valentin-Festschrift”, Physiologische Studien (Leipzig, 1882)Google Scholar ed. P. Grützner & B. Luchsinger). Under Grützner Kraft worked on ciliary motion and tried to find means of recording it. Referring to the representation of cilia in motion as shown in Fig. 1 he wrote:
“Zeichnet man sich, wie dies in ähnlicher Art schon Purkinje und Valentin thaten, die Haare 1–20 … im Kreis auf die Bildscheibe eines Purkinje' sehen Stroboskopes mit 20 Schlitzen, so dass man beim Drehen der Scheiben eine grössere Anzahl Haare auf einmal übersieht…” Kraft, H., Arch. ges. Physiol. (Pflüger), xlvii (1890), 205.Google Scholar
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40 Valentin, , op. dt (16), 503.Google Scholar Doppier is usually credited first to have suggested (1845) the use of a stroboscope for the study of ciliary movement. See Martius, , Arch. Physiol. (du Bois Raymond), viii (1884), 456–460Google Scholar; also Harting, P., Das Mikroskop (Braunschweig, 1859), 405.Google Scholar
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43 “…weil die Schwere und der Widerstand des Kiemenstücks als unberechnete Factoren von wesentlicher Bedeutung sind…” Valentin, , op. cit. (16), 506.Google Scholar
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46 Opera omnia, iii, 19.Google Scholar This was also the view of Müller, J., Arch. Anat. Pfysiol. wiss. Med. (Müller) (1836), clvGoogle Scholar, and Henle, , op. cit. (21), 256–257.Google Scholar
47 Opera omnia, ii, 151.Google Scholar Cf. Gray, , op. cit. (32), 87Google Scholar; Sleigh, , op. cit. (3), 196.Google Scholar
48 Illustrations are from the paper in Nova Acta Physico-Medica, op. cit. (12). They resemble illustrations in Valentin's manuscript Histiogenia as reproduced by Müllener, op. cit. (4).
49 Opera omnia, ii, 151.Google Scholar
50 “Motus ille circa axin circularis, quern principem posuimus, aut eo efficitur, quod irritabilis quacdam vel muscularis substantia in bulbillo contineatur aut in fibris illis sit posita…” Opera omnia, i, 340.Google Scholar
51 “Motus vibratorius nee a voluntate, nee a systemate nervoso, nee a musculorum majorum actione dependet.” Opera omnia, i, 361.Google Scholar
52 Opera omnia, iii, 16–18.Google Scholar J. Henle already noticed that Purkyně and Valentin changed their view on the muscular basis of cilia. Henle, , op. cit. (21), 264.Google Scholar
53 “Es muss daher jene Metamorphose nicht sowohl eine morphologische, ab eine molecolare sein, und es liesse sich z.B. hiernach erwarten, dass eine Flimmermembran mehr Kohlensäure und Wasser ausscheide, als eine nicht flimmernde Haut.” Valentin, G., op. cit. (16), 509.Google Scholar
54 Opera omnia, ii, 153.Google Scholar
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59 Frankenberger, Z., Časopis lékař českých, cvi (1957), 1364.Google Scholar
60 Quoted by Rotschuh, K. E., Physiologie der Wandel, ihrer Konzepte, Probleme und Methoden vom 16. bis 19. Jahrhundert (Freiburg and Munich, 1968), 302, 334.Google Scholar
61 Cf. also what C. F. A. Pantin writes on the development of experimental zoology in his contribution to the “Sir James Gray Festschrift”, edited by Ramsay, J. A. and Wigglesworth, V. B., The Cell and the Organism (Cambridge, 1961), 1–8.Google Scholar
62 “—sed eo, quod motus vibratorius utriusque generis res sit, et morphologici et physiologici…” Opera omnia, i, 362.Google Scholar
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