Publication | Closed Access
Lysosomes in Biology and Pathology
892
Citations
0
References
1974
Year
Cell PathologyExtracellular MicrovesiclesElegant Introductory EssayFirst VolumeAutophagyEndocytic PathwayExosomesSame ObjectPhilosophy Of BiologyPhilosophy (French Literary Studies)Philosophy (Philosophy Of Mind)Cell BiologyLysosome BiologyBiologyCell OrganelleNatural SciencesCellular BiochemistryVesicle BiologyMedicineLysosomal Storage Disease
In an elegant introductory essay to the first volume of<i>Lysosomes in Biology and Pathology</i>published in 1969, Christian de Duve wrote of the lysosome: It is a concept, the result of an interaction mediated by a specific assortment of techniques between an observer and an object.... Other investigators looking at the same object with other methods, or even other biochemists exploring it with the same methods, could have arrived at different views. This disclaimer cannot diminish the immense importance to biology of de Duve's discovery of the lysosome or, as he might put it, the discovery of de Duve's concept of the lysosome. Consider for a moment the difficulties that would be encountered in the study of man if the function, no less the existence, of the digestive tract remained unknown. That was essentially the state of knowledge with respect to the cell at the time de Duve set