ABSTRACT

In an intriguing series of experiments carried out many years ago, a common scientific belief, feted by no less than three Nobel prizes, was brought into question. The observations were about proteins—the molecules that the genetic code specifies and that are in one way or another central to all of life’s activities. The experiments however were not about what proteins do, but how they are moved, in particular how they are moved from where they are made to where they act. The results of these studies conflicted with the standard view of how this happens, and thus became controversial.

The standard view, the vesicle theory of protein secretion, envisions proteins being carried within and out of cells en masse in membrane-bound sacs or vesicles. The controversial experiments demonstrated that to the contrary individual protein molecules cross the relevant membranes as a result of their own motion. This was thought to be impossible at the time. Proteins Crossing Membranes is a personal narrative that tells the story of the controversy. Among other things, the author illustrates that scientists, like the rest of us, can rigidly hold onto their beliefs despite evidence that they are misguided. 

Key Features

  • Reviews the data in support and critical of the vesicle theory of protein secretion
  • Explores the ways scientists respond to evidence that challenges a favored theory
  • Documents the author’s personal experiences in this conflict-laden situation

section section one|2 pages

Intimations and forebodings

chapter chapter one|2 pages

At the bench

Watching and learning

chapter chapter two|4 pages

An indifferent student

Of clams and starfish

chapter chapter three|8 pages

The dark in the window

The real thing

chapter chapter four|10 pages

The observant Dr. Pavlov

Digestion, saliva, and hormones

section section two|2 pages

On the versimilitude of simulacra

chapter chapter five|12 pages

The structures

The cell seen in the electron microscope

chapter chapter six|6 pages

Microvesicles

Imagining tiny goings-on

chapter chapter seven|4 pages

Secretion

Granules popping out of cells

chapter chapter eight|6 pages

To see, we must transform

What are you really looking at?

chapter chapter nine|6 pages

Making things whole

To get beyond speculation

chapter chapter ten|8 pages

The search for dynamics

The theory examines itself

chapter chapter eleven|8 pages

Location, location, location!

Where am I?

chapter chapter twelve|4 pages

Making the impossible real

Could the impossible be possible?

section section three|2 pages

Nature’s way

chapter chapter thirteen|10 pages

Testing the theory

Testing the already known

chapter chapter fourteen|12 pages

Ring the tocsin

Into the fray

chapter chapter fifteen|6 pages

The clarion call

The impossible takes place

chapter chapter sixteen|8 pages

The membrane revolution

When is a revolution not a revolution?

chapter chapter seventeen|6 pages

The case of the disappearing granules

Extraordinary evidence

chapter chapter eighteen|4 pages

What just happened?

What didn’t happen?

chapter chapter nineteen|4 pages

Irreversible

The one-way street

chapter chapter twenty|4 pages

Resurrection

The report of death was premature

chapter chapter twenty-one|8 pages

Pandora’s box and the back door

Now look at what you have done!

section section four|2 pages

Reification and attitudes

chapter chapter twenty-two|8 pages

Expunging heterodoxy

No you don’t!

chapter chapter twenty-three|6 pages

The visit

The unwelcome guests

chapter chapter twenty-four|8 pages

Rejuvenation

What now?

chapter chapter twenty-five|2 pages

Pavlov and the zymogen granule

Could it really be so simple?

chapter chapter twenty-six|2 pages

The impossibility of it all

On the coherence of theory

chapter chapter twenty-seven|4 pages

The complexity excuse

Avoiding Occam’s razor

chapter chapter twenty-eight|6 pages

Belief

The beliefs of scientists

chapter chapter twenty-nine|4 pages

The rise of the careerist

Science as a profession

chapter chapter thirty|6 pages

Cronyism

Politics in the world of science

chapter chapter thirty-one|2 pages

Psyche

Why me?

chapter chapter thirty-two|4 pages

Carved in stone

Dogma