- John Heuser
Infobox_Scientist
name = John Edward Heuser
image_width = 151px
caption = John Heuser
birth_date = birth date and age|1942|08|29
birth_place =Pittsburgh ,Pennsylvania
field =Cell Biology ,Physiology ,Biophysics ,Electron Microscopy
work_institution =Washington University in Saint Louis , St. Louis, MO
prizes = 2005 Fellow,American Academy of Arts and Sciences
2007 Fellow,American Association for the Advancement of Science
doctoral_advisor = J. David RobertsonDr. John E. Heuser, M.D. (b.
August 29 ,1942 ) is a Professor ofBiophysics in the department ofCell Biology andPhysiology at theWashington University School of Medicine . Heuser created quick-freeze deep-etchelectron microscopy , a pioneering technique that lets biologists take detailed pictures of fleeting events inside living cells. For decades, Heuser has used this technique to capture details of the molecular mechanisms that underlie many basic biological activities, includingnerve cell signal transmission,muscle contraction , and most recently, the fusion ofviruses with cells during the spread ofinfection . He compares quick-freeze deep-etch electron microscopy to using a stroboscopic flash to freeze the action in aphotograph . To make it possible to image the frozen sample with an electron microscope, Heuser adds an ultra-thin film of metallicplatinum that molds snugly against the sample's frozen surface contours. He and others in his lab have worked to make the equipment and procedures necessary for this process available to researchers around the world. Currently Heuser has patents pending onWashington University 's behalf for even more advanced versions of his quick-freezing machines. Heuser graduatedmagna cum laude fromHarvard Medical School in 1969 and joined the Washington University faculty as a professor ofbiophysics in 1980. He is currently associate editor of the Journal of Neurocytology and previously served as associate editor of the Journal of Cell Biology. Hiscurriculum vitae lists over 200 scientific publications. He was elected as a fellow of theAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences class of 2005 and of theAmerican Association for the Advancement of Science in 2007.Current Research
*Freeze-etch
electron microscopy as applied to cell and molecular biology
*The structural basis of neuronalsynaptic transmission Heuser explains what is done in his laboratory:"Electron microscopic visualization of everything from whole cells to individual molecules is the work of this laboratory. Special emphasis is given to developing new methods of sample preparation that will achieve a more natural, life-like appearance of samples in the microscope. To accomplish this, we have developed what is now called the "quick-freeze, deep-etch" technique for electron microscopy and have disseminated the equipment and procedures needed to carry out this technique throughout the field. Currently, we use "quick-freezing" to capture several different cellular processes that are unusually fleeting, including membrane budding and fusion, synaptic vesicle discharge during neural transmission, movement of
cilia andflagella onvertebrate andprotozoal cells, and muscle contraction. In each case, our aim has been to visualize the underlying molecular mechanisms occurring. We also use "deep-etching" to visualize moleculesadsorbed to inert substrates in order to study mechanisms ofmacromolecular assembly and disassembly in various processes, including remodeling of cytoskeletons,clathrin -mediatedendocytosis , cell-to-cell recognition, and the formation of extracellular matrices."Experience
*1963-1967 Undergraduate apprentice in J. David Robertson's Electron Microscopy Lab, Harvard Medical School and the
McLean Hospital , Belmont, MA
*1969-1974 USPHS Fellow and Moseley Travelling Fellow of Harvard University, as Postdoctoral trainee in the Biophysics Unit of University College, London, underSir Bernard Katz and Ricardo Miledi
*1970-1972 USPHS Military service in Laboratory ofNeuropathology and Neuroanatomical Sciences, NINCDS, Bethesda, MD with Dr. Thomas S. Reese
*1974-1980 Assistant, Associate, and then Full Professor of Physiology, Department of Physiology,University of California , San Francisco, CA
*1980- Professor of Biophysics, Department of Cell Biology and Physiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MOProfessional Activities
*Associate Editor of the Journal of Cell Biology (past)
*Associate Editor of the Journal of Neurocytology (current)
*Service to editorial boards of: Journal of Neurophysiology, Brain Research, Journal of Comparative Neurology, Journal of Neuroscience Methods,Gastroenterology ,Cell (journal) , Anatomical Record,Journal of Molecular Biology
*Ad Hoc reviewer for NINCDS, NCRR, andNational Science Foundation Education
*1964, B.A., cum laude,
Harvard College
*1969, M.D., magna cum laude,Harvard Medical School
*1970-1973, Graduate studies in Biophysics,University College London Teaching Activities
*1980-1990 Lecturer (with
Ursula Goodenough ) in Washington University Medical School courses in Cell Biology andNeurobiology
*1980-1995 Lecturer in Washington University Medical School courses in Cell Biology and Neurobiology
*1974-1980 Lecturer inUCSF graduate and medical school courses: Cell Biology and Neurobiology
*1974-1995 Director of graduate course: Neuroanatomical Methods
*1975-1998 Instructor, Summer Neurobiology course,Marine Biological Laboratory , Woods Hole, MAExternal links
* [http://heuserlab.wustl.edu Heuserlab homepage]
* [http://www.heuserlab.wustl.edu/heuser-cv.shtml John Heuser's Publications (1966-present)]
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