Wilhelm Roux

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Wilhelm Roux bigraphy, stories - German biologist

Wilhelm Roux : biography

9 June 1850 – 15 September 1924

Wilhelm Roux (9 June 1850 – 15 September 1924) was a German zoologist and pioneer of experimental embryology.

Works

  • Der Kampf der Teile im Organismus (1881)
  • Über die Entwicklungsmechanik der Organismen (1890)
  • Geschichtliche Abhandlung über Entwicklungsmechanik (two volumes, 1895)
  • Die Entwicklungsmechanik (1905)
  • Terminologie der Entwicklungsmechanik (1912).

Early life

Roux was born and educated in Jena, Germany where he attended university and studied under Ernst Haeckel. He also attended university in Berlin and Strasbourg and studied under Gustav Schwalbe, Friedrich Daniel von Recklinghausen, and Rudolf Virchow. Although he was trained as a clinical doctor, he spent his career in experimental biology. His doctoral thesis on the embryological development of blood vessels was a seminal early study in biophysical modelling, a milestone in the study of the cardiovascular system.

Career and research

For ten years Roux worked in Breslau (now Wroclaw), becoming director of his own Institute of Embryology in 1879. He was professor at Innsbruck, Austria from 1889–95, then accepted a professorial chair at the Anatomical Institute of the University of Halle, a post he retained until 1921.

Roux’s research was based upon the notion of Entwicklungsmechanik or developmental mechanics: he investigated the mechanisms of functional adaptations of bones, cartilage, and tendons to malformation and disease. His methodology was to interfere with developing embryos and observe the outcome. Roux’s investigations were performed mainly on frogs’ eggs to research the earliest structures in amphibian development. His goal was to show Darwinian processes at work on the cellular level.

In 1885 Roux removed a portion of the medullary plate of an embryonic chicken and maintained it in a warm saline solution for several days, establishing the principle of tissue culture which would later be taken up by Ross Granville Harrison and Paul Alfred Weiss.

In 1888, Roux published the results of a series of defect experiments in which he took 2 and 4 cell frog embryos and killed half of the cells of each embryo with a hot needle. He reported that they grew into half-embryos and surmised that the separate function of the two cells had already been determined. This led him to propose his "Mosaic" theory of epigenesis: after a few cell divisions the embryo would be like a mosaic, each cell playing its own unique part in the entire design.

After a few years Roux’s theory was refuted by the studies of his colleague Hans Driesch and later, with more precision, Hans Spemann showed that, as a rule, Driesch’s conclusions were correct, but that results like Roux’s may be obtained after intervention in certain planes. Despite this early lapse into a fallacy of reductionism, Roux’s pioneering mechanical methodology was to prove most fruitful in 20th century biology.