Shinya Inou茅, Pioneer in Microscopy and Imaging of Live Cells, Dies at 98

WOODS HOLE, Mass.鈥擶ith great sadness, t澳门六合彩app (MBL) announces the passing of Shinya Inou茅, Ph.D., former 澳门六合彩appTrustee and pioneering innovator in microscopy and live-cell imaging, on Sept. 30 in Falmouth, Mass. He was 98 years old.

A Celebration of Shinya Inou茅鈥檚 Life will be held at the 澳门六合彩appon October 26, 2019 at the 澳门六合彩appClub, 100 Water Street, Woods Hole from 12 鈥 2 PM. Refreshments and light food will be available from 12 鈥 1 PM followed by a Celebration of Dr. Inou茅鈥檚 life from 1 -2 PM. Friends, families, and colleagues are encouraged to share their stories and remembrances. A memorial notice provided by the Inou茅 family is听here.

Shinya Inou茅 at the 澳门六合彩appin 2006. Credit: Tom Kleindinst Shinya Inou茅 at the 澳门六合彩appin 2006. Credit: Tom Kleindinst

An extraordinary scientific leader and mentor at the 澳门六合彩appfor more than half a century, Inou茅 was named Distinguished Scientist, the laboratory鈥檚 highest honor, in 1986. One of Inou茅鈥檚 greatest contributions was to introduce the era of live-cell imaging by using polarized light microscopy to explore the intricacies of cellular structure and dynamics.

Inou茅鈥檚 dual careers as a microscopist and cell biophysicist were elegantly complementary: Each refinement of his hand-built microscopes led to a clearer understanding of fundamental life processes, including cell division, fertilization, and early embryonic development. Disorder of these cellular events can cause critical diseases and growth abnormalities.

Inou茅 was also the co-inventor of video microscopy, a revolutionary advance that ushered in the modern era of electronic imaging, which quickly advanced to digital imaging. Important advances in video microscopy were developed at the 澳门六合彩appin the early 1980s.

Inou茅鈥檚 far-reaching impact at the 澳门六合彩appbegan in the 1950s when he was a visiting investigator from Princeton University and continued after he joined the 澳门六合彩appas a senior scientist in 1982. He founded the Architectural Dynamics in Living Cells Program in 1992, an international, collaborative center for innovation in light microscopy that continues today under the umbrella of the MBL鈥檚 Bell Center.

As founding director of the 澳门六合彩appAnalytical and Quantitative Light Microscopy course in 1979, Inou茅 pioneered an innovative commercial/academic course format that still today provides a fertile ground for beneficial interactions between the microscopy industry and the academic research community. This collaborative format has become standard, adopted by microscopy courses the world over.

With his son, Ted Inou茅, Shinya co-founded Universal Imaging Corporation in 1984, one of the first digital image analysis and electronic microscope control software companies. This company produced the first digital image analysis computer software, Image-1, which was eventually renamed MetaMorph and set the standard for all image analysis software made today.

Inou茅 served on the 澳门六合彩appBoard of Trustees from 1970 to 1977, 1979 to 1986, and 1992 to 1996 and was a member of the 澳门六合彩appSociety from 1962 to 2012. He and his wife, Sylvia, established several funds and endowed lectureships at the 澳门六合彩appto support research and training in microscopy. He also served on the faculty of the MBL鈥檚 Physiology course and Optical Microscopy course for many years.

鈥淔or the last 30 years, I had the great fortune to work with Shinya Inou茅, who was an exacting and demanding, yet patient and always generous mentor, who taught by example, combining a passion both for creating tools and applying them to reveal the mysteries of life,鈥 said 澳门六合彩appSenior Scientist Rudolf Oldenbourg. 鈥淚nou茅 not only was an outstanding scientist, but he is universally respected for his kind and thoughtful ways, for his humanity, and his attention to personal relationships.鈥

鈥淲e have a lost a giant in cell biology and a wonderful human being," said colleague Ron Vale of University of California, San Francisco. "Shinya was听the听pioneer in studying the dynamics of living cells by microscopy, an approach that is widespread today. He developed many new methods in microscopy, and his observations led to many unique insights in the working of cells. Shinya left behind a lasting legacy of contributions in cell biology. He will be widely missed.鈥

The son of a Japanese diplomat, Inou茅 was born in 1921 in London, England. His distinguished career began in the 1940s at Tokyo University, where as an undergraduate he studied with cell biologist and 澳门六合彩appsummer investigator Katsuma Dan. Dan presented Inou茅 with a challenge: Build a microscope that will allow us to see the mitotic spindle鈥攖he transient structure that moves chromosomes in the dividing cell鈥攊n a living sea-urchin egg. While the great microscopists of the 19th听and early 20th听centuries had produced fine images of cellular parts, including the mitotic spindle, these were generally produced in fixed (nonliving) cells. Inou茅 rose to Dan鈥檚 challenge, building his first polarized light microscope out of various found parts鈥攊ncluding a discarded machine-gun base and a tin tea can鈥攁t Misaki Marine Biological Station in 1947, in the aftermath of World War II.

Shinya Inou茅 teaching in the 澳门六合彩appPhysiology course in 2007. Credit: Dyche Mullins Shinya Inou茅 teaching in the 澳门六合彩appPhysiology course in 2007. Credit: Dyche Mullins

With the assistance of Katsuma Dan鈥檚 wife, biologist Jean Clark Dan, Inou茅 entered Princeton University in 1948, where he was mentored by cytologist Kenneth W. Cooper and graduated with a Ph.D. in biology in 1951. While at Princeton, Inou茅 improved his polarized light microscope (now nicknamed the 鈥淪hinya Scope鈥) and in 1951 he used it to prove the universal existence of the spindle fibers, the dynamic protein filaments that move chromosomes in the dividing cell. Inou茅 announced this landmark discovery in the MBL鈥檚 Lillie Auditorium, where he premiered a movie of dividing cells that clearly showed the action of the spindle fibers in the mitotic spindle. It was the first major accomplishment in a career devoted to delving into the mysteries of living cells.

鈥淚n an attempt to better understand how cells divide, Dr. Inou茅 made a series of epochal innovations in the development of light microscopy,鈥 said Akihito, the former Emperor of Japan, in awarding Inou茅 the 2003 International Prize for Biology. 鈥淭hese advances rendered it possible to directly observe dynamic changes in the supramolecular structure of living cells during cell division. This contributed immensely to advancing research in such fields of cell division, cytoskeleton, and cell motility 鈥 The products of Dr. Inou茅鈥檚 research are widely utilized by researchers around the world and contribute immensely to the advancement of biological sciences.鈥

Shortly after joining the 澳门六合彩appin 1982, Inou茅 and Robert and Nina Allen independently discovered at the 澳门六合彩appthat using a video camera (rather than the eye) to record images from a microscope brought great gains in image clarity. Inou茅 combined video microscopy with computer-assisted contrast enhancement, allowing one to see fine details of cells that had never been seen before.听 It was the birth of the electronic era in microscopy.

Over five decades, Inou茅 built seven generations of his Shinya Scope, with technical improvements each time, and in the late 1990s he invented the centrifuge polarizing microscope. Inou茅 held four U.S. patents for his microscopes and authored more than 100 scientific papers, many of which are collected in听The Collected Works of Shinya Inou茅: Microscopes, Living Cells, and Dynamic Molecules听(2008: World Scientific Publishing Co.) He also authored the book听Video Microscopy听(1986: Plenum Press).

Prior to his move to the MBL, Inou茅 was professor of biology at University of Pennsylvania (1966-1982), where he directed the Program in Biophysical Cytology; professor and department chair of cytology at Dartmouth Medical School (1959-1966); associate professor at University of Rochester (1954-1959); assistant professor at Tokyo Metropolitan University (1953-1954); and instructor at University of Washington (1951-1953).

Inou茅 was the recipient of numerous awards and honors. They include the Order of the Sacred Treasure, Gold Rays with Neck Ribbon Award from the Government of Japan (2010); the International Prize for Biology from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (2003); membership in the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; the Distinguished Scientist Award from the Microscopy Society of America (1995); and the E.B. Wilson Award from the American Society for Cell Biology (1992). He was honored to lecture on and demonstrate his work to Japan鈥檚 Emperor Showa in 1947, 1953, and 1975.

He leaves his wife, Sylvia (McCandless) Inou茅, five children, six grandchildren, and one great-grandchild.

Mitosis in pollen mother cell of Easter Lily, observed with Shinya Scope-2 and recorded on 16mm celluloid film. This historic sequence (1951) finally proved the reality of spindle fibers and fibrils [microtubules], which move chromosomes and define the plane of cell division in living cells. Credit: Shinya听Inou茅

Other Memorial Notices and Resources:


Reminiscences of Shinya Inou茅 by colleagues (collected by Rudolf Oldenbourg and Tomami Tani)



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The Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) is dedicated to scientific discovery 鈥 exploring fundamental biology, understanding marine biodiversity and the environment, and informing the human condition through research and education. Founded in Woods Hole, Massachusetts in 1888, the 澳门六合彩appis a private, nonprofit institution and an affiliate of the .