*** Welcome to piglix ***

Alexander A. Maximow

Alexander A. Maximow (Aleksandr Aleksandrowitsch Maksimow)
Alexander A. Maximow, Portrait.JPG
Alexander A. Maximow
Born (1874-02-03)3 February 1874
Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire
Died 4 December 1928(1928-12-04) (aged 54)
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Residence Russian Empire, Germany, United States
Fields Medicine, Histology, Embryology, Hematology
Institutions
Alma mater Imperial Military Medical Academy, Russia
Known for Unitary theory of stem cells in adult organisms, in particular of the blood stem cell

Alexander Alexandrowitsch Maximow (Russian: Александр Александрович Максимов; 3 February [O.S. 22 January] 1874 - December 4, 1928), was a Russian-American scientist in the fields of Histology and Embryology whose team developed the hypothesis about the existence of "polyblasts". Maximow is renowned for his experimental work on the unitarian theory of hematopoiesis: all blood cells develop from a common precursor cell. Maximow served as a Corresponding Member of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

Alexander Alexandrowitsch Maximow was born into an old and wealthy merchant family in Saint Petersburg in Russia. From 1882 onwards he was a pupil of Karl May School in Saint Petersburg and in 1891 he entered the Imperial Military Medical Academy in Saint Petersburg, aged 17. During this time he completed his first scientific works, and he was awarded the Gold Medal for research on the "Histogenesis of experimentally induced amyloid degeneration of the liver in animals" published in the journal Russian Archives of pathology, clinical medicine and bacteriology. In 1896, he earned a degree as a medical doctor from the same institution. Subsequently, he studied for two years in Germany at Freiburg and Berlin. Returning to Saint Petersburg, he served as professor of histology and embryology from 1903 until 1922. While he could teach and pursue his research after the Russian Revolution he could not arrange himself with living in communist Russia. He fled 1922 with his sister, his wife and his adopted son to the USA. From 1922 until his death in 1928, he served as a professor of anatomy at the University of Chicago and conducted his research with his sister Claudia as congenial lab technician and co-worker at his side ("...(stand) ihm seine Schwester Claudia als kongeniale Laborantin und Mitarbeiterin zur Seite...")


...
Wikipedia

...