Alexander Stanislavovich Dogiel or Dogel (Russian: Александр Станиславович Догель; 1852 in Panevėžys – 1922 in Saint Petersburg), was a Russian Empire histologist and neuroscientist.[1] He contributed to a morphological classification of nerve cells. The cells of Dogiel, bipolar neurons of the spinal ganglia, are named after him.[2]
Biography
editDogel studied at Kazan University where he graduated in 1883. He inaugurated his career in 1885 as a monitor in embryology. Then he taught and practiced histology, first in Tomsk from 1888, then in 1892 at the Saint Petersburg Medical Institute where he was entrusted with the organization of the histology laboratory. He founded the Russian Archives of Anatomy, Histology and Embryology (Russian: архив анатомии, гистологии и эмбриологии).
Dogel lived and worked in isolation, rarely but authoritatively publishing lengthy and richly illustrated articles. His work focused on degenerative and regenerative neuromuscular junction abnormalities, neuromuscular spindles, and various cellular categories within the central nervous system. He demonstrated a mastery of silver staining techniques and some of his illustrations contain a level of detail comparable to that which can be obtained using a low-power electronic microscope. He examined neurons and classified them based on their lengths, the shapes of dendrites, the positions of nuclei and their location within ganglia.[3][4]
Dogel was an important figure in Russian histology. He trained Russian scientists such as Vladimir Bekhterev, Babukin, Yakulovich and Doinnikov in this specialty, but never went to visit his colleagues from Western Europe. His son Valentine Dogiel (1882-1955) became a parasitologist.[5]
Major works
edit- Die sensiblen Nervenendigungen im Herzen und in den Blutgefässen der Säugethiere. Archiv für Mikroskopische Anatomie 1898; 52: 44-70.
- Die Endigungen des sensiblen Nerven in den Augenmuskeln und deren Sehnen beim Menschen und den Saugietieren. Arch Mikr Anat 1906; 68 : 501-22.
- Der Bau der Spinalganglien des Menschen und der Säugetiere. Jena: Fischer, 1908[6]
- Zur Frage über die Ganglien der Darmgeflechte bei den Säugetieren. Anat' Anz' 10:517–528. (1895)
- Dogiel, A.S. (1895). "Zur Frage über den feineren Bau des sympathischen Nervensystems bei den Säugethieren". Arch. Mikrosk. Anat. 46: 305–344. doi:10.1007/BF02906657. S2CID 83752217.
- Dogiel, A.S. (1896). "Zwei Arten sympathischer Nervenzellen". Anat. Anz. 11: 679–687.
- Dogiel, A.S. (1899). "Ueber den Bau der Ganglien in den Geflechten des Darmes und der Gallenblase des Menschen und der Säugethiere". Arch. Anat. Physiol. Leip. Anat. Abt.: 130–158.
References
edit- ^ BEZKOROVAINY, ANATOLY. (2018). SCIENCE AND MEDICINE IN IMPERIAL RUSSIA. [Place of publication not identified]: NOT AVAIL. ISBN 9781643708584. OCLC 1046073242.
- ^ de Castro, Fernando (2016-04-20). "The Cajal School in the Peripheral Nervous System: The Transcendent Contributions of Fernando de Castro on the Microscopic Structure of Sensory and Autonomic Motor Ganglia". Frontiers in Neuroanatomy. 10: 43. doi:10.3389/fnana.2016.00043. ISSN 1662-5129. PMC 4837679. PMID 27147984.
- ^ Brehmer, A.; Schrödl, Falk; Neuhuber, Winfried (1999). "Morphological classifications of enteric neurons -- 100 years after Dogiel". Anatomy and Embryology. 200 (2): 125–135. doi:10.1007/s004290050267. ISSN 0340-2061. PMID 10424871. S2CID 20736532.
- ^ Сотников, O.C.; Марков, И.И. (2018). "КОНЦЕПЦИЯ РЕТИКУЛЯРНОЙ ОРГАНИЗАЦИИ НЕРВНОЙ ТКАНИ АЛЕКСАНДРА ДОГЕЛЯ" [The conception of the reticular organization of the nervous tissue of Alexander Dogiel] (PDF). Морфологические ведомости (in Russian). 26 (1): 8–19. doi:10.20340/mv-mn.18(26).01.8-19.
- ^ Bauer, O.N.; Kennedy, C.R.; Chubb, J.C.; Polyanski, Y.I. (1982). "Biographical note. Valentine A. Dogiel, 1882-1955". International Journal for Parasitology. 12 (1): 13–14. doi:10.1016/0020-7519(82)90087-X.
- ^ "VL People [per240]". vlp.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de. Retrieved 2019-04-11.