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John Spangler Nicholas

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John Spangler Nicholas
BornMarch 10, 1895
Kintnersville, Pennsylvania, U.S.
DiedSeptember 11, 1963 (aged 68)
Academic background
EducationGettysburg College (BS, MS)
Yale University (PhD)
Doctoral advisorRoss Granville Harrison
Academic work
DisciplineZoology
Sub-disciplineEmbryology
InstitutionsUniversity of Pittsburgh
Yale University

John Spangler Nicholas (March 10, 1895 – September 11, 1963) was an American embryologist and a professor of zoology at Yale University. He contributed to experimental techniques for the study of embryology through transplants, the early stage development of teleost and mammalian zygotes.

Early life and education

Nicholas was born in Kintnersville, Pennsylvania, the only child of Reverend Samuel Trauger and Elizabeth Ellen. Although the parents hoped he would join the Lutheran order, he chose to study medicine, influenced by an uncle, Harry Spangler. He earned a Bachelor of Science and Master of Science from Gettysburg College. He received a PhD from Yale University in 1921.

Career

In 1915, he taught anatomy at the University of Pittsburgh at the invitation of Davenport Hooker. Nicholas enlisted with the United States Army Medical Corps during World War I and returned following discharge in 1919. He joined Yale in 1926 and became Sterling Professor of Zoology in 1939. He served at Yale until his retirement in 1963.

Nicholas followed experiments in the asymmetry of development which had been begun by his Yale supervisor Ross G. Harrison. Harrison had shown that grafts develop as left or right limbs based on the orientation in which a limb bud was grafted. Spangler showed that this orientation was defined by a narrow ring of cells. He later developed experimental methods to grow rat embryos in chicken chorioallantois.

Personal life

Nicholas married Helen Benton Brown in 1921.

References

  1. ^ Oppenheimer, Jane M. (1969). "John Spangler Nicholas" (PDF). Biographical Memoirs. National Academy of Sciences. 40: 239–289.
  2. Nicholas, J. S. (1947). "Experimental Approaches to Problems of Early Development in the Rat". The Quarterly Review of Biology. 22 (3): 179–195. doi:10.1086/395786. ISSN 0033-5770. PMID 20264552. S2CID 26830880.
  3. Nicholas, J. S. (1925). "Notes on the application of experimental methods upon mammalian embryos". The Anatomical Record. 31 (4): 385–394. doi:10.1002/ar.1090310404. ISSN 0003-276X. S2CID 83873706.
  4. Nicholas, J. S.; Rudnick, Dorothea (1933). "The development of embryonic rat tissues upon the chick chorioallantois". Journal of Experimental Zoology. 66 (2): 193–261. doi:10.1002/jez.1400660203. ISSN 0022-104X.
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