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Eduard Strasburger was born in Warsaw, Congress Poland, the son of Anna Karoline (von Schütz) and Eduard Gottlieb Strasburger (1803–1874). [2] [3] In 1870, he married Alexandra Julia ("Alexandrine") Wertheim (1847–1902), they had two children: Anna (1870–1942) and Julius (1871–1934).
Symplastic transport was first realized by Eduard Tangl in 1879, who also discovered plasmodesmata, [2] a term coined by Eduard Strasburger, 1901. [3] [4] In 1880, Hanstein coined the term symplast. [5] The contrasting terms apoplast and symplast were used together in 1930 by Münch. [6] [7]
Van Beneden elucidated, together with Walther Flemming and Eduard Strasburger, the essential facts of mitosis, where, in contrast to meiosis, there is a qualitative and quantitative equality of chromosome distribution to daughter cells.
Eduard Strasburger [gq] February 1, 1844 Warsaw, Russian Empire: May 18, 1912 Bonn, German Empire: 1910 Nominated by Osc.Hertwig the only time (id=8825) Edouard Van Beneden [gr] March 5, 1846 Leuven, Belgium: April 28, 1910 Liège, Belgium 1910 Nominated by Fernand Schiffers (id=8169) the only time but died before the only chance to be rewarded ...
1880–1890: Walther Flemming, Eduard Strasburger, and Edouard Van Beneden elucidate chromosome distribution during cell division. 1889: Richard Altmann purified protein free DNA. However, the nucleic acid was not as pure as he had assumed. It was determined later to contain a large amount of protein.
Each theory was improved in the following decades: the apposition (or lamination) theory by Eduard Strasburger (1882, 1889), and the intussusception theory by Julius Wiesner (1886). [7] In 1930, Ernst Münch coined the term apoplast in order to separate the "living" symplast from the "dead" plant region, the latter of which included the cell ...
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Eduard Strasburger, Walther Flemming, Heinrich von Waldeyer and the Belgian Edouard Van Beneden laid the basis for the cytology and cytogenetics of the 20th century. Strasburger, the outstanding botanical physiologist of that century, coined the terms nucleoplasm and cytoplasm. He said "new cell nuclei can only arise from the division of other ...