Prof Kresimiru Krnjevicu, Pocasnom predsjedniku AMCA Quebec, cestitamo 93. rodjendan.
Za one koji zele saznati vise o znacajnom znanstvenom doprinosu Prof
Krnjevica, Society for Neuroscience je objavila auobiografski clanak
unutar serije o najznacajnijim neuroznanstvenicima. Clanak je dostupan ovdje.
Kresimir Krnjevic, on his 93rd birthday Ante L Padjen, (shortened version of this text was published in Gaudeamus for his 92nd birthday)
This
year September 7, 2017, Krešimir Krnjević, Honorary President of AMCA
Quebec turned 90. This very brief summary of Krnjević’s achievements
should remind us about his special place not only in the
Canadian-Croatian community but in world neuroscience as well. Krešimir
– Krešo (later in life Kris and KK) was born on September 7, 1927 in
Zagreb, in the family of Dr Juraj Krnjević, then Secretary of the
Croatian Peasant Party, and Nada Hiršl. The political situation of
Yugoslavia very much influenced his early years and the next 20 years of
peripatetic lifestyle. The family was forced into exile 1930 and until
establishment of Croatian Banovina 1939 they lived in Switzerland where
Kreso completed junior high school in French. Three years in the IV Real
High school in Zagreb were KK’s only formal education in Croatia. The
stay in Zagreb was again interrupted by WWII. Krnjevic father had to
leave the country 1941, this time as part of the Croatian contingent of
Yugoslav government in London never to return to his beloved homeland.
Children, however, were sent to the safety of South Africa where 1944
Kreso completed his high school – in English.
As a child Kreso
wanted to become an engineer, later his interests extended to
psychology, architectures, medicine. In 1944, he entered one of the most
distinguished medical schools in Great Britain – University of
Edinburgh. Interest in engineering, technology and exact quantitative
measurements never left the future neuroscientist and provided him with
great deal of insight and tools in solving biological problems. Soon
upon completion of medical studies 1949 Kreso found that despite strong
affinity for clinical medicine, he disliked its hierarchic and stifling
structure, and decided to embark on research - to study of the brain
with a distant goal and promise that neurophysiology will help to bridge
the chasm between brain physiology and psychology. Kreso completed
his PhD in 1954 and following the advice of his supervisor went for a
post-doctoral experience to University of Washington in Seattle,
supported by the prestigious Beit Memorial Fellowship. A chance meeting
with John C Eccles brought him to National University in Canberra,
Australia. By the late fifties Jack Eccles was a dominant figure in the
world neurophysiology. He established foundations of cellular
neurophysiology as it is known even today, crowned by a Nobel prize
1963. This fruitful collaboration with Ricardo Miledi and Jack
Eccles in Canberra ended when Kreso accepted invitation by John Gaddum, a
dominant figure in pharmacology of the first half of 20th century, to
move to the ARC Institute in Babraham, UK.. A few years later in 1964
Kreso accepted invitation to spend a year at McGill University as
Visiting Professor. As it happened, moving to Montreal concluded the
peripatetic life lifestyle and started half a century of exceptionally
productive career in Canada. At McGill, he became Director of Research
in Anesthesia Department and later Chairman of the Physiology
Department. It is difficult to describe all the areas of brain
research that Kreso explored in over 50 years of research and over 300
publications. It covers studies on peripheral nervous system,
neuromuscular junction, synaptic mechanisms and neurotransmitters,
mechanism of anesthesia, hypoxia, role of divalent ions, to pharmacology
and physiology of hippocampus and other - most of them pioneering,
with far reaching consequences. Only a few prominent discoveries are
described. One of the focal areas of his research was humoral
neurotransmission. At the time, small molecules like acetylcholine and
catecholamines were recognized as transmitters in the peripheral nervous
system – but nothing was certain about neurotransmitters in CNS. Using
microiontophoretic application of minute amounts of test substances on
single neurons Kreso and numerous collaborators embarked on an extensive
exploration of a wide range of compounds, especially those naturally
occurring in the brain. This pioneering work lead to major discovery of
neurotransmitters in the central nervous system. It established the
roles of previously unsuspected endogenous amino acids such as glutamate
for excitation, and GABA for inhibition. The findings opened the doors
for major advances in neuropharmacology since many agents were
recognized to interact with mechanism of neurotransmission (eg,
benzodiazepines acting on GABA receptors). Kreso’s discovery and
analysis of slow excitation by acetylcholine (ACh) in cerebral cortex
established a new ionic mechanism of synaptic transmission by decreasing
conductance to K ions. This novel mechanism of transmitter action, not
as a direct excitant but rather potentiating other excitatory inputs was
the first example of what became known as modulatory mechanism.
Additional histochemical studies of Kreso and collaborators demonstrated
that cholinergic fibers (those containing ACh) to cortex originate from
the basal forebrain – a neuronal system that has been associated with
consciousness and later found to degenerate in dementia. Kreso
established a novel role of intracellular Ca2+ ion: opening of K
channels and thus regulate excitability by hyperpolarizing the neuronal
membranes. The discovery established Ca2+ ions as an important
intracellular messenger providing a link between metabolism and
excitability, and it opened a vast area of research, as such channels
are found in many central and peripheral nerve cells, throughout the
animal kingdom. The cholinergic depolarizing modulatory action could
be counteracted by hyperpolarizing action of cytoplasmic Ca2+ ions,
mediated by increased K conductance. Resulting opposite shifts in
cortical activity were proposed as possible mechanisms of consciousness
and anesthesia.
In 1981, Eugene Garland of ISI and Current
Contents established Kreso as one of the 1,000 most cited contemporary
scientists and named three of his papers "citation classics." These
pioneering achievements were recognized by numerous professional and
public awards and acknowledgements, the most significant being Fellow of
Royal Society of Canada (1975), Alexander Forbes Lecturer Marine
Biology Labs, Woods Hole, Mass. (1978), President Canadian Physiological
Society (1979), Council Member, International Union of Physiological
Sciences (IUPS) (1983–1993), Gairdner International Award (1984),
Officer of the Order of Canada (1987), Jasper Lecturer Canadian
Association for Neuroscience (1989), Wilder Penfield Prize, Government
of Quebec (1997), Kershman Lecturer, Eastern EEG Association (1998),
etc,
Kreso remained attached to his Croatian roots. Despite his
short studies in Croatia he commands an eloquent Croatian and has been
present in Croatian neuroscience as lecturer and member of societies:
Honorary Member of Croatian Pharmacological Association (1983), Honorary
President and Member of the Advisory Board of Croatian Institute of
Brain Research (1991- ), Corresponding Member of Croatian Academy of
Arts & Sciences (1992), Spiridon Brusina Prize, Croatian Natural
Science Association (2001). In Canada, Kreso accepted to be Honorary
President of Almae Matris Croaticae Alumni, Quebec (1990-present). He
was also president of the International Croatian Initiative (1992-1998).
Those interested in knowing more about KK can read his autobiographical note prepared for the Society of Neuroscience.
Dr. Ante L Padjen, MD, DSc (Zagreb), since 1976 professor of
pharmacology, therapeutics and neuroscience at McGill University and
founding president of AMCA Quebec (1990). He was the first graduate
student of Dr Mirjana Randic upon her return from a 3-year postdoctoral
fellowship with Dr Krnjevic. As a neighbour for 30 years on the 12th floor of
McIntyre Building he has had a particular privilege to converse with Dr
Krnjevic about neuroscience, music, art, literature - and Croatia.
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