256:(Since in other ways as well various circumstances indicate that microörganisms and granula are equivalent to each other and represent elementary organisms, which are found wherever living forces are initiated, then we will designate them with the common name of "bioblasts".) Available on-line at:
254:"Da auch sonst mancherlei Umstände dafür sprechen, dass Mikroorganismen und Granula einander gleichwerthig sind und Elementarorganismen vorstellen, welche sich überall finden, wo lebendige Kräfte ausgelöst werden, so wollen wir sie mit dem gemeinschaftlichen Namen der Bioblasten bezeichnen."
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amid delicate heating, he observed filaments in the nearly all cell types, developed from granules. He named the granules "bioblasts", and explained them as the elementary living units, having
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173:" ("The Elementary Organism"). His explanation drew much skepticism and harsh criticism. Altmann's granules are now believed to be
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271:"From bioblasts to mitochondria: ever expanding roles of mitochondria in cell physiology"
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The
Scientists: A History of Science Told Through the Lives of Its Greatest Inventors
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Jan Sapp, "Mitochondria and their host", in W F Martin & M Müller, eds,
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252:, (Leipzig, Germany: Veit & Co., 1890), p. 125. From p. 125:
188:'s term "nuclein" when it was demonstrated that nuclein was acidic.
153:. Using that along with a new staining technique of applying acid-
214:
Discovering Cell
Mechanisms: The Creation of Modern Cell Biology
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He improved fixation methods, for instance, his solution of
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326:(2nd ed.). New York: Macmillan Co. pp. 289–291.
16:
German histologist and pathologist of the 19th century
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340:", Merriam–Webster, Accessed online: 30 Aug 2013.
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216:(New York: Cambridge University Press, 2009),
84:(12 March 1852 – 8 December 1900) was a
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351:Origin of Mitochondria and Hydrogenosomes
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374:. New York: Random House. p. 546.
323:The Cell in Development and Inheritance
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138:professor (extraordinary). He died in
441:Scientists from the Kingdom of Prussia
180:He is credited with coining the term "
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491:Academic staff of Leipzig University
466:People from the Province of Prussia
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142:in 1900 from a nervous disorder.
476:University of Königsberg alumni
471:University of Greifswald alumni
122:, obtaining a doctorate at the
353:(Heidelberg: Springer, 2007),
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410:Mitochondrial Medicine Center
126:in 1877. He then worked as a
486:University of Giessen alumni
481:University of Marburg alumni
258:Deutsches Textarchiv, Berlin
169:autonomy, in his 1890 book "
106:Altmann studied medicine in
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320:Wilson, Edmund B. (1900).
235:(New York: Knopf, 1935),
288:10.3389/fphys.2010.00007
134:, and in 1887 became an
275:Frontiers in Physiology
171:Die Elementarorganismen
232:The History of Biology
269:O'Rourke, B. (2010).
184:" in 1889, replacing
124:University of Giessen
147:potassium dichromate
461:History of genetics
456:German histologists
451:German pathologists
229:Erik Nordenskiöld,
101:Province of Prussia
338:Altmann's granules
186:Friedrich Miescher
446:German anatomists
436:People from Iława
412:The Mitochondrion
248:Richard Altmann,
212:William Bechtel,
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49:(1900-12-08)
431:1900 deaths
426:1852 births
159:picric acid
93:histologist
89:pathologist
74:histologist
70:Pathologist
56:Nationality
420:Categories
393:References
381:0812967887
112:Königsberg
108:Greifswald
35:1852-03-12
237:pp 538–39
163:metabolic
128:prosector
370:(2002).
355:pp 57–59
307:21423350
218:pp 80–83
298:3059936
167:genetic
155:fuchsin
136:anatomy
132:Leipzig
120:Giessen
116:Marburg
99:in the
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118:, and
86:German
60:German
281:: 7.
197:Notes
192:Books
95:from
376:ISBN
303:PMID
165:and
149:and
91:and
44:Died
29:Born
293:PMC
283:doi
130:at
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33:(
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