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From the Archive

A new take on the old

This section is our way of celebrating 50 years of magnificent cell biology in the pages of the Journal of Cell Biology. It is, to a first approximation, chronological, but by necessity far from exhaustive. We consciously set out to sketch some high points in the history of the Journal, but not to cover the entirety of cell biology. Papers from other journals are, however, always cited when appropriate.

The selection of articles to be covered will always be a subjective process. We tried to improve these judgements by using multiple sources of information: older review articles, citation frequencies and, most importantly, the recommendations of past and present JCB editorial board members. Sincere thanks to all those who provided suggestions and helped with context and first-hand accounts of research—research that happened many years ago but that provides many salient lessons for cell biologists working today.

The first forty years
After highlighting papers from the first 40 years of the JCB, this marks the completion, at least for now, of the “From the Archive” series. We hope you will use this series as a sampler, and continue to enjoy the astonishing work contained within the entire online JCB archive.

William Wells
News Editor

From Past Issues:

The discovery of synaptic vesicles
The visualization of the messengers of the synapse — synaptic vesicles — gives the hypothesis of quantal transmitter release a structural correlate.

Ribosomes, or the particles of Palade
George Palade identifies particulate components of the cytoplasm, known initially as the particles of Palade and later as ribosomes.
 
Microsomes are the in vitro ER
George Palade and Philip Siekevitz unite the fields of microscopy and fractionation in this work. They conclude that Albert Claude’s biochemical fraction called microsomes are the in vitro version of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) — a cytological feature first noted by Keith Porter.

Catching sight of lysosomes
Lysosomes are identified by Christian deDuve when a membrane barrier gradually dissolves, thus yielding the tell-tale release of an enzyme activity over time.

The invention of freeze fracture EM and the determination of membrane structure
Russell Steere introduces his home-made contraption for freeze fracture electron microscopy (EM), and Daniel Branton uses it to conclude that membranes are bilayers.

A pathway for secretion
Radioactive proteins are followed after their synthesis as they progress towards their secretory fate; this allows the definition of not only trafficking pathways but of the organelles that lie along that pathway
.

Cilia get arms for bending
Björn Afzelius identifies cilia arms and comes up with the filament sliding model of cilia movement. The sliding is visualized first by Peter Satir and more directly by Ian Gibbons.

Heterochromatin is late
Antonio Lima-de-Faria shows that heterochromatin replicates later than euchromatin.

How to spot a satellite cell
Based on appearance alone, Alexander Mauro identifies satellite cells as a possible muscle stem cell.

The nucleolar origin of rRNA
Base compositions and half-lives suggest to Jan-Erik Edström that the nucleolus is the source of rRNA.

How vessels become leaky
Guido Majno and George Palade find that inflamed blood vessels leak when endothelial cells loosen their grip on one another.

Autophagy unveiled
Autophagy is identified, given a function, and named.

There’s DNA in those organelles
DNA is directly visualized in first chloroplasts and then mitochondria.

A cell line that is under control
George Todaro and Howard Green establish the 3T3 cell line — the first well behaved, contact-inhibited cell line.

Defining junctional complexes
A mess of nomenclature is sorted out by Marilyn Farquhar and George Palade, who use superb microscopy to define three of the four major types of cell–cell junctions in the polarized epithelial cells of vertebrates.

Microtubules get a name
Microtubules are named, and recognized as a widespread phenomenon even outside of the spindle.

Coated pits bring in the yolk
A study of yolk protein uptake leads Thomas Roth and Keith Porter to propose that endocytosis is specific to a particular cargo and that the vesicle coat might be functioning in both selection and mechanical molding.

The first supper
Fritz Miller and George Palade carry out one of the first examples of combined cytochemistry and electron microscopy. They find that enzymes and substrates colocalize in lysosomes.

Sugars sprinkled onto proteins in the Golgi
Glycosylation occurs in the Golgi complex, based on labeling with tritiated glucose carried out by Marian Neutra and C.P. Leblond.

Were mitochondrial contractions driving the cellular energy cycle?
In the days before Mitchell’s chemiosmotic hypothesis, Charles Hackenbrock and others are intrigued by the correlation of an in vitro mitochondrial structural change with oxidative phosphorylation function.

Excess secretory products fuse with lysosomes
Robert Smith and Marilyn Farquhar find that excess secretory granules are not stored but fuse with multivesicular bodies (MVBs) that then mature and fuse with lysosomes.

Defining gap junctions
Jean-Paul Revel and Morris Karnovsky unite the fields of adhesion and intercellular current transfer around a distinct, structural correlate called the gap junction.

Endothelial tight junctions form the blood–brain barrier
What is the cellular correlate of the so called blood-brain barrier? Thomas Reese and Morris Karnovsky find that it is the junctions between endothelial cells in the brain vasculature. Their discovery comes thanks to three factors: high resolution electron microscopy; the development of sensitive tracer methods; and a fortuitous lunch date.

Microtubules shape the cell
Based on cold treatment and correlation, Lewis Tilney and Keith Porter find evidence that microtubule polymerization is important for the development and maintenance of cell shape.

The discovery of tubulin
Tubulin is isolated by Gary Borisy and Edwin Taylor as a colchicine-binding activity, and by Ian Gibbon’s group from cilia.

How to make a lysosome
Daniel Friend and Marilyn Farquhar find that transport pathways intersect: synthesized enzyme meets endocytosed protein in the lysosome.

Seeing peroxisomes
Christian de Duve’s group isolates and characterizes peroxisomes.

Not actin, not myosin, but intermediate
They are neither thick nor thin: Howard Holtzer identifies intermediate filaments as a completely new kind of filament.

Tension gets chromosomes oriented
Using grasshopper cells in meiosis, Bruce Nicklas and Carol Koch show that attachments of mono-oriented chromosomes can be stabilized using a glass needle to pull on one of the chromosomes. Thus tension between two kinetochores, generated only in the bi-oriented state, might discriminate between correct and incorrect attachments.

Actin in non-muscle cells
Howard Holtzer’s group uses heavy meromyosin as a probe to find actin filaments in non-muscle cells.

Growth cones make proteins, too
The recent discovery that elongating axons can synthesize proteins locally is pre-dated by 30 years by Virginia Tennyson’s discovery that growth cones have ribosomes.

Actin in locomotion
Ken Yamada, Brian Spooner and Norman Wessels use the newly discovered drug cytochalasin B to show that actin filaments drive cell locomotion.

Spectrin is peripheral
S. Jonathan Singer, Garth Nicolson, and Vincent Marchesi use red cell ghosts to provide strong evidence for the existence of peripheral membrane proteins.

A macrophage mystery leads to dendritic discovery
In the days before MHC function is defined, digestion of antigens in macrophages is mistakenly taken as evidence against the cells’ role in antigen presentation. But the study leads Ralph Steinman and Zanvil Cohn to their vital discovery of dendritic cells.

Curbside recycling at the synapse
When John Heuser and Thomas Reese visualize neurotransmitter 'quanta' being released, they also catch sight of endocytic recycling that forms new synaptic vesicles. Ralph Steinman confirms that significant plasma membrane recycling must also be occurring in other cell types.

Actin pushes in bizarre places
Lewis Tilney discovers that actin polymerization is a means of force generation. His studies use unorthodox systems: the acrosomal reaction in both starfish and sea cucumber sperm and the cell-to-cell motility of the Listeria monocytogenes bacterium.

Lost in translation: the signal hypothesis
Günter Blobel and Bernhard Dobberstein use a Rube Goldberg concoction of mouse RNA, rabbit ribosomes, and dog ER to reconstruct cell biology's version of the ship in the bottle: how proteins a cell intends to secrete end up in the endoplasmic reticulum.

Powered by gel
Thomas Stossel and John Hartwig nab the very first actin-binding protein, find that it spurs actin fibers in vitro to coalesce into a mesh, and tie this process to what happens in vivo during phagocytosis.

EGF is internalized and degraded
Occupied growth factor receptors do not remain statically at the cell surface, say Graham Carpenter and Stanley Cohen, but are internalized to allow continued signaling or downregulation.

Contacting the matrix 
Can the extracellular matrix (ECM) act as an inducer? Using an ingenious combination of biochemistry and tissue culture on Nucleopore filters, Elizabeth Hay and Stephen Meier show that direct contact with ECM is necessary for corneal epithelium to differentiate.

Myosin powers cytokinesis
Issei Mabuchi and Makoto Okuno, in the first use of antibodies as protein inhibitors in live cells, show that myosin interacts with actin to provide the force behind cell cleavage.

The sticky business of discovering cadherins
A change in the recipe for a trypsin solution allows Masatoshi Takeichi to distinguish calcium-dependent adhesion.

Microtubules as a gyroscope for cells on the go
Harry Malech, Richard Root, and John Gallin make neutrophils switch their direction, and thus find that microtubules orient and organize the internal structure of migrating cells.

Basal lamina instructs innervation
Joshua Sanes and Jack McMahan show that regenerating nerve axons take their cues for new synapse formation from the extracellular matrix (ECM) of muscle cells and not from the muscle cells themselves.

Actin and microtubules interact via MAP
A viscometer allows Linda Griffith and Tom Pollard to demonstrate that actin and microtubules interact via MAPs.

The isolation of the nuclear lamina
Aaronson, Blobel, and Gerace define the extent and composition of the nuclear lamina.

'Porterplasm' and the microtrabecular lattice
At the end of a long, distinguished career, Keith Porter tangles with a possible EM artifact.

Viruses catch an endocytic ride into the cell
Ari Helenius puts together snapshots of virus entry to form a coherent sequence of events.

What the cytoskeleton really looks like
Freeze drying gives John Heuser a far more complete view of the cytoskeleton.

Microtubules park parallel in the half-spindle
By defining microtubule polarity in the mitotic spindle, Richard McIntosh narrows down the possible mechanisms used during mitosis.

Isolating SRP
Walter, Blobel, Warren and Dobberstein pin down the proteins (and RNA) that grab onto signal sequences.

Roll-your-own endothelial tubes
Tom Maciag and Michael Stemerman find the critical factor that keeps endothelial cells alive and controls their tube formation.

Tagging an organelle
Warren, Louvard, and Reggio isolate the first Golgi-specific antibodies.

A portrait of the nuclear pore complex
Ron Milligan and Nigel Unwin get a closer look at nuclear pore architecture.

More than one way to attach
Wen-Tien Chen and S. Jonathan Singer define different connections between membrane receptors and extracellular matrix.

Dishing up bone formation
Hiroaki Kodama establishes a cell line of osteoblasts (bone-forming cells) that mineralize in vitro.

Yeast becomes a cell biologist
Adams, Pringle, and Kilmartin introduce new antibody techniques, and budding yeast makes its debut as a cell biology workhorse.

Frog egg extracts can do a cell’s work
Manfred Lohka and Yoshio Masui show that frog egg extracts can be used to recreate complex in vivo processes.

Pursuing the middleman: the hunt for integrins
A group of labs use antibodies to find integrins and define their function.

Building a case for the chromosome scaffold
William Earnshaw and Margarete Heck localize topo 2 to the base supports of the radial loops of chromatin.

A big BiP on the radar screen
David Bole and John Kearney track BiP movements and gather evidence for its role as a chaperone.

Microtubules turn over rapidly
Eric Schulze and Marc Kirschner chemically label microtubules to define their dynamics.

Sticking it out with tight junctions
With persistence and a species change, tight junction proteins are isolated.

Filling in the gap: cloning a connexin
Paul, Goodenough, Kumar and Gilula clone the first connexin proteins.

MAP1c is a motor
Bryce Paschal and Richard Vallee show that dynein is the other motor.

Making tendons
David Birk and Robert Trelstad discover how the cell manipulates collagen to form a tendon.

Lipid raft idea is floated
Gerrit van Meer and Kai Simons get the first hints of lipid rafts based on lipid sorting experiments.

Passenger proteins check in
Carol Cooke and William Earnshaw identify the first passenger proteins and catalog their strange movements.

Centrosome choreography
Tony Hyman investigates how centrosome movements are choreographed, and how they determine the division axis.

Active neuronal death
Eugene Johnson shows that neurons lacking trophic factors actively kill themselves.

Cadherin as a tumor suppressor
Behrens and Birchmeier find that cells cut free from their cadherin moorings can metastasize.

BFA sends proteins back
Jon Yewdell uses Brefeldin A to detect retrograde trafficking.

Microtubules get dynamic
Tim Mitchison makes photoactivatable tubulin, allowing him to track flux in the spindle.

ECM signals ECM degradation
Damsky and Zena Werb show that changes in ECM interaction change expression of ECM-modifying enzymes.

Chromosome snatching by lateral microtubules
Conly Rieder gets kinetochore capture on tape.

In vitro nuclear import
In vitro nuclear import assays lead Gerace and Blobel to the importance of the Ran GTPase.

Skeleton crew
Anne Ridley and Alan Hall find that rho and its relatives control actin dynamics.

Cyclin localization controls activity
Jonathon Pines and Tony Hunter show that cyclin activity is controlled by location.

The kinetochore uncoiled
Bill Brinkley and Raymond Zinkowski pull apart the kinetochore.

ECM determines fate
Streuli and Bissell find that extracellular matrix can tell a cell what to do and what to become.

The Hunting of the snRNP
Carmo-Fonseca and Lamond track the nuclear travels of snRNPs.

Integrin signal transduction
Keith Burridge and Lewis Romer identify FAK as a key relay for passing integrin signals into the cell.

Dying On Cue
Yuri Lazebnik and William Earnshaw create a system for in vitro apoptosis.

Hold on for dear life
Steve Frisch and Hunter Francis find that epithelial cells that lose touch with the extracellular matrix kill themselves by anoikis.

An unattached kinetochore screams: “Wait!”
Schultz, Rieder and Sluder find that unattached kinetochores tell mitotic cells to wait before dividing.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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