Subtitles section Play video
-
In the late 1860s, scientists believed they were on the verge
-
of uncovering the brain's biggest secret.
-
They already knew the brain controlled the body through electrical impulses.
-
The question was, how did these signals travel through the body
-
without changing or degrading?
-
It seemed that perfectly transmitting these impulses
-
would require them to travel uninterrupted along some kind of tissue.
-
This idea, called reticular theory,
-
imagined the nervous system as a massive web of tissue
-
that physically connected every nerve cell in the body.
-
Reticular theory captivated the field with its elegant simplicity.
-
But soon, a young artist would cut through this conjecture,
-
and sketch a bold new vision of how our brains work.
-
60 years before reticular theory was born,
-
developments in microscope technology
-
revealed cells to be the building blocks of organic tissue.
-
This finding was revolutionary,
-
but early microscopes struggled to provide additional details.
-
The technology was especially challenging for researchers studying the brain.
-
Soft nervous tissue was delicate and difficult to work with.
-
And even when researchers were able to get it under the microscope,
-
the tissue was so densely packed it was impossible to see much.
-
To improve their view,
-
scientists began experimenting with special staining techniques
-
designed to provide clarity through contrast.
-
The most effective came courtesy of Camillo Golgi in 1873.
-
First, Golgi hardened the brain tissue with potassium bichromate
-
to prevent cells from deforming during handling.
-
Then he doused the tissue in silver nitrate,
-
which visibly accumulated in nerve cells.
-
Known as the “black reaction,”
-
Golgi's Method finally allowed researchers to see the entire cell body
-
of what would later be named the neuron.
-
The stain even highlighted the fibrous branches
-
that shot off from the cell in different directions.
-
Images of these branches became hazy at the ends,
-
making it difficult to determine exactly how they fit into the larger network.
-
But Golgi concluded that these branches connected,
-
forming a web of tissue comprising the entire nervous system.
-
14 years later, a young scientist and aspiring artist
-
named Santiago Ramón y Cajal began to build on Golgi's work.
-
While writing a book about microscopic imaging,
-
he came across a picture of a cell treated with Golgi's stain.
-
Cajal was in awe of its exquisite detail— both as a scientist and an artist.
-
He soon set out to improve Golgi's stain even further
-
and create more detailed references for his artwork.
-
By staining the tissue twice in a specific time frame,
-
Cajal found he could stain a greater number of neurons with better resolution.
-
And what these new slides revealed would upend reticular theory—
-
the branches reaching out from each nerve cell
-
were not physically connected to any other tissue.
-
So how were these individual cells transmitting electrical signals?
-
By studying and sketching them countless times,
-
Cajal developed a bold, new hypothesis.
-
Instead of electrical signals traveling uninterrupted across a network of fibers,
-
he proposed that signals were somehow jumping from cell to cell
-
in a linear chain of activation.
-
The idea that electrical signals could travel this way was completely unheard of
-
when Cajal proposed it in 1889.
-
However his massive collection of drawings supported his hypothesis from every angle.
-
And in the mid-1900s, electron microscopy further supported this idea
-
by revealing a membrane around each nerve cell
-
keeping it separate from its neighbors.
-
This formed the basis of the “neuron doctrine,”
-
which proposed the brain's tissue was made up of many discrete cells,
-
instead of one connected tissue.
-
The neuron doctrine laid the foundation for modern neuroscience,
-
and allowed later researchers to discover that electrical impulses
-
are constantly converted between chemical and electrical signals
-
as they travel from neuron to neuron.
-
Both Golgi and Cajal received the Nobel Prize
-
for their separate, but shared discoveries,
-
and researchers still apply their theories and methods today.
-
In this way, their legacies remain connected as discrete elements
-
in a vast network of knowledge.