Sometimes the story is in knowing how to connect the dots (or electron micrographs). In 1978, Ari Helenius took his laboratory—which had already made a name for itself in isolating and characterizing membrane proteins—in a new, cellular direction. He emerged with a biological storyboard composed of electron microscopy (EM) snapshots.
A meeting in Berlin in the spring of 1978 helped change his perspective. There he rubbed elbows with “the big cell biology crowd,” including George Palade, Christian de Duve,...
The Rockefeller University Press
2005
The Rockefeller University Press
2005
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