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The Journal of General Physiology logoLink to The Journal of General Physiology
. 1928 Sep 20;12(1):167–186. doi: 10.1085/jgp.12.1.167

THE DEATH WAVE IN NITELLA

I. APPLICATIONS OF LIKE SOLUTIONS.

W J V Osterhout 1, E S Harris 1
PMCID: PMC2323693  PMID: 19872444

Abstract

Experiments on cutting confirm the prediction that the current of injury will be positive when the cell is in contact with concentrated solutions and negative with dilute solutions. They support the idea that the protoplasm is made up of layers differing considerably in their properties, each having a death curve of simple and regular form, the more rapid alteration of the outer layer making the protoplasm more positive and the more rapid alteration of the inner making it more negative. From the point where the cell is cut a wave of some sort, which we may for convenience call a death wave, passes along the cell, setting up at each point it touches a death process which has the greater speed and intensity the nearer it is to the cut.

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