Fritiof Stig Sjöstrand was a
Swedish physician and
histologist born in
Stockholm died he was , 98.. He started his medicial education at
Karolinska Institutet in 1933,
[2] where he received his Ph.D.
Karolinska Institutet in 1944.
(November 5, 1912 – April 6, 2011)

Sjöstrand worked as an assistant at the department of
pharmacology, where he first had used
polarization microscopy, he first heard about the new method of
electron microscopy in 1938, within which he would become a pioneer.
Manne Siegbahn at the Nobel Institute for Physics had planned to build an electron microscope in Sweden, and Sjöstrand got involved in the project to explore its use in medical research. The main challenge was to produce sufficiently thin samples, and Sjöstrand's method for producing ultrathin tissue samples was published in
Nature in 1943.
[4] However, it seemed that research based on electron microscopy would be too time-consuming for a Ph.D. thesis, so his 1944 thesis was based on
fluorescence spectroscopy. In 1947-1948, he received a scholarship to further study electron microscopy at
Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Department of Biology. Back in Sweden, he received funding to build up an electron microscopy research laboratory. In 1959, Sjöstrand was both offered a position as professor of histology at Karolinska Institutet, and as professor at
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). He chose UCLA, because conditions for research and funding were better there.
[4]
Sjöstrand founded the
Journal of Ultrastructure Research in 1957. Since 1990, the journal is called
Journal of Structural Biology.
As of 2008, Sjöstrand was still living in the United States.
[2] Sjöstrand died on April 6, 2011, at the age of 98.
To see more of who died in 2010 click here
No comments:
Post a Comment