(1913-1980)

小蓝视频 Affiliation from 1947 to 1979 as Faculty, Investigator, Trustee, and Corporation Member

Stephen W Kuffler
Stephen W. Kuffler. Credit: US National Library of Medicine, Digital Collections

Known as the father of modern neuroscience, Stephen Kuffler laid the foundation for our understanding of the nervous system. His mantra that 鈥渢he good old days are now鈥 holds true even today, thanks in large part to the fundamental research he conducted at 小蓝视频 (小蓝视频) and beyond.

History knows him as 鈥楽teve,鈥 but he was born in 1913 as Wilhelm Kuffler and didn鈥檛 adopt his new name until over two decades later. He spent the first 10 years of his life on his family鈥檚 estate in T谩p, Hungary. But his adventures horseback riding, swimming, and exploring the nearby city ended when he was sent to a Jesuit boarding school in Austria. There, he would become well-versed in Greek, Latin, and the humanities.

Despite being exposed to very little science, he chose to pursue medicine for its 鈥渋nternational character.鈥 He would not be disappointed. During the five years it took him to earn an M.D. in Vienna, he spent six months in London and trekked through the Middle East and Egypt to evade the turmoil preceding the Austrian Anschluss.

The Germans ultimately invaded Austria in 1938, during Kuffler鈥檚 clinical residency. His paternal grandmother was Jewish, and the hostility of his environment was made all too clear when he had to perform a postmortem on a colleague murdered by the Nazis. He fled to London, and soon after to Sydney, Australia.

There, Kuffler gained footing in experimental science on unexpected ground: the tennis court. He would volley with neurophysiologist and future Nobel Laureate John Eccles, who hired Kuffler as an assistant in his physiology lab at Sydney Hospital. Eccles was using cats to study the neuromuscular junction 鈥 the interface between a motor neuron and a muscle. Kuffler was joined by future Nobel Laureate Bernard Katz, who convinced him to take advantage of simpler, non-mammalian systems such as frogs. Thanks to this encouragement, in 1941 Kuffler was the first to master a dissection that allowed him to isolate a single frog nerve fiber and the muscle it innervated.

This feat drew international kudos, and helped earn Kuffler a fellowship at the University of Chicago. Shortly thereafter, he accepted a professorship at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. His research career took off. First came seminal studies on skeletal muscle fibers and muscle spindles, then experiments on the mammalian retina and stretch receptor neurons in crustaceans 鈥 some of which were conducted at the 小蓝视频, where he began spending summers in 1947.

In 1959, Kuffler relocated his team from Johns Hopkins to the Department of Pharmacology at Harvard Medical School (HMS). The team included future Nobel Laureates Torsten Wiesel and David Hubel, Edwin Furshpan, David Potter and instrumentation specialist Bob Bosler. Less than a decade later, Kuffler became the inaugural chair of the HMS Department of Neurobiology, which was the first of its kind in the world. At the time, the notion of uniting experts from various disciplines to study the nervous system, which Kuffler accomplished, was unprecedented.

鈥淪teve knew everyone, and everyone really loved him,鈥 recalls Edward Kravitz, former co-director of the 小蓝视频鈥檚 Neurobiology course, who joined Kuffler鈥檚 HMS team in 1960 and began spending summers at 小蓝视频 as well. 鈥淪teve ran the department like a dad. We didn鈥檛 go to Thanksgiving dinner with our families 鈥 we went to Steve鈥檚 house.鈥 Like many dads, Kuffler was also a notorious punster. 鈥淲e allowed him one pun a day, but he didn鈥檛 follow the rules,鈥 Kravitz says.

In 1963 at the 小蓝视频, Kuffler established the first experimental lab classes centered on the nervous system, taught by Dave Potter and Ed Furshpan. Known as the Nerve-Muscle Program, these classes preceded the 小蓝视频鈥檚 Neurobiology and Neural Systems & Behavior courses. Kuffler鈥檚 program drew disciples of diverse disciplines, and was instrumental in introducing them to the budding field of neurobiology.

Stephen W. Kuffler. Credit: 小蓝视频 Archives
Stephen W. Kuffler. Credit: 小蓝视频 Archives

Kuffler was known for selecting just the right organism for each research question. When Kravitz arrived at HMS, Kuffler and other researchers were working to pinpoint the role of a nervous system chemical called gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). Crustaceans such as crayfish and lobsters were the optimal subjects, because they contained inhibitory and excitatory nerve fibers that were large in diameter but small in number. Each nerve fiber branched many times to innervate muscle bundles.

Thanks to the elegant simplicity of this system, Kravitz and his group, with Kuffler鈥檚 strong support, demonstrated that stimulating the inhibitory 鈥 but not the excitatory 鈥 nerves released GABA. This indicated GABA was a particular type of chemical called an inhibitory neurotransmitter. Back then, only two other neurotransmitters had been identified, and GABA was the first inhibitory one.

Kravitz remembers presenting this work for the first time at the 小蓝视频, expecting to receive props. Instead, he was met with resistance. Many Americans at that time believed nerve cells only used electrical signals to communicate 鈥 not chemicals. When one particularly esteemed scientist stood up and denounced the findings, Kuffler came to Kravitz鈥檚 defense.

鈥淪teve would do things like that,鈥 Kravitz says, 鈥渂ut he would always do it in a way that he didn鈥檛 offend people.鈥

In fact, one of Kuffler鈥檚 favorite forums was the 小蓝视频鈥檚 Monday night seminar series, colloquially known as the Fight Club. Here, research titans would discuss 鈥 and often debate 鈥 their scientific theories. After Kuffler stopped doing experiments on the GABA system, he transitioned to studying the function of glial cells in the nervous system, introducing the use of the leech for those studies.

Kuffler returned to Woods Hole nearly every summer with his wife, Phyllis, and children; their home near Stony Beach was known as a welcoming place filled with lively conversation. Phyllis ran a summer symphony in Woods Hole and was an early organizer of the 小蓝视频 Club, which to this day promotes activities for 小蓝视频 families.

鈥淪teve鈥檚 sharp mind, good humor and playful interactions with colleagues and their families and students made him beloved and inspiring. All of us enjoyed having the pleasure to work or interact with this joyful and wonderful man,鈥 says Wiesel. A beloved member of the 小蓝视频 community to the end, Stephen Kuffler died in 1980 and was buried at the Church of the Messiah, Woods Hole.

鈥 By Raleigh McElvery

Selected References

Akkermans, Rebecca (2017) Stephen Kuffler.聽The Lancet Neurology, DOI:聽

Katz, Bernard (1982) Stephen William Kuffler, 24 August 1913-11 October 1980.聽Biographical Memoirs, Fellows of the Royal Society, DOI:聽

Kravitz, E. A., S. W. Kuffler, and D. D. Potter (1963) Gamma-aminobutyric acid and other blocking compounds in crustacea: III. Their relative concentrations in separated motor and inhibitory axons.聽Journal of Neurophysiology, DOI:聽

Kravitz, Edward A.聽. Originally published in the聽International Society for Neuroethology Newsletter.

Nicholls, J. G. (1998) Stephen W. Kuffler: August 24, 1913-October 11, 1980.聽Biographical Memoirs, National Academy of Sciences (US)聽74: 193-208.

von Hoeckendorf, Vincent, and Frank W. Stahnisch (2016) Stephen William Kuffler (1913鈥1980).聽Journal of Neurology: DOI:聽


A gift in Stephen Kuffler鈥檚 honor will benefit聽The Stephen W. Kuffler Fellowship Fund, supporting early-career visiting investigators, 小蓝视频 course students, or 小蓝视频 courses.

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