FEBS Letters
Volume 583, Issue 23 , Pages 3732-3737, 3 December 2009

How Camillo Golgi became “the Golgi”

Edited by Daniela Corda

Museum for the History of the University of Pavia, Department of Experimental Medicine, University of Pavia, Italy

Received 2 September 2009; accepted 4 October 2009. published online 13 October 2009.

Abstract 

On April 1898 Camillo Golgi communicated to the Medical–Surgical Society of Pavia, the discovery of the “internal reticular apparatus”, a novel intracellular organelle which he observed in nerve cells with the silver impregnation he had introduced for the staining of the nervous system. Soon after the discovery it became evident that this cellular component, which was also named the “Golgi apparatus”, was a ubiquitous structure in eukaryotic cells. However the reality of the organelle was questioned for years and many cytologists considered the internal reticular apparatus as an artefact due to the fixation and/or metallic impregnation procedure. The controversy was finally solved in the mid-1950s by electron microscopy when the Golgi apparatus definitely acquired its dignity of being a genuine cell organelle. The designation of “Golgi complex” entered officially in the literature in 1956. Both the terms Golgi apparatus and Golgi complex are currently interchangeable. However a quick “the Golgi” and the introduction of Golgi in adjectival form are now prevalent in the blooming scientific literature on the organelle. Thus Camillo Golgi underwent his final transformation and, becoming the eponym of the organelle he had discovered, he found a way to immortality.

Keywords: Camillo Golgi, Black reaction, Cell organelle, Golgi apparatus, Golgi complex, “The Golgi”, Artefact, Electron microscopy

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PII: S0014-5793(09)00789-3

doi:10.1016/j.febslet.2009.10.018

FEBS Letters
Volume 583, Issue 23 , Pages 3732-3737, 3 December 2009