Josef Victor Rohon

Josef Victor Rohon (1845-1923)

Josef Victor Rohon (7 May 1845, Temes-Buttyin 15 March 1923) was an Austrian paleontologist and neuroanatomist.

He studied medicine, zoology and neuroanatomy at the University of Vienna, where he was influenced by Theodor Meynert (1833-1892), Carl Claus (1835-1899), Hans Kundrat (1845-1893) and Eduard Albert (1841-1900). In 1884 he graduated magna cum laude at Munich, where he spent the ensuing years conducting paleontological research. At Munich, he worked closely with Karl Alfred von Zittel (1839-1904), performing research that included anatomical studies of conodonts.[1]

In the spring of 1888, he relocated to St. Petersburg, where he served as a private tutor until 1895. Afterwards, he was an associate professor of histology (later for embryology) at the Karl-Ferdinands-Universität in Prague. In February 1903, he attained a full professorship of histology and embryology.[2]

His name is associated with "Rohon-Beard cells", defined as large, mechanosensory neurons found in the dorsal spinal cord of fishes and amphibians. Rohon-Beard cells are present only in the embryonic and young larval (tadpole) stages.[3][4]

Selected writings

References

  1. Google Books The Genesee Conodonts: with descriptions of new species by William Letchworth Bryant]
  2. Biographical information based on a translation from an equivalent article at the German Wikipedia
  3. Reyes R, Haendel M, Grant D, Melancon E, Eisen JS (January 2004). "Slow degeneration of zebrafish Rohon-Beard neurons during programmed cell death". Developmental Dynamics. 229 (1): 30–41. doi:10.1002/dvdy.10488. PMID 14699575.
  4. Neurocomputing.org Earliest Tactile Sensory Neurons in Vertebrate Evolution
  5. Botanik und Zoologie in Österreich in den Jahren 1850 bis 1900: Festschrift by Anton Handlirsch, Richard Wettstein (Ritter von Westersheim)
  6. Google Search (publications)
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