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Winfried Denk (born November 12, 1957 in Munich) is a German physicist. He built the first two-photon microscope while he was a graduate student (and briefly a postdoc) in Watt W. Webb's lab at
Cornell University Cornell University is a private statutory land-grant research university based in Ithaca, New York. It is a member of the Ivy League. Founded in 1865 by Ezra Cornell and Andrew Dickson White, Cornell was founded with the intention to tea ...
, in 1989.


Early life and education

Denk was born in Munich, Germany. As a child he spent most of his playtime learning to use the tools and building materials in his father's workshop. In school it became apparent that Denk’s ‘talents were unevenly spread across subjects, math and physics being favored’. Fixing and constructing electronic devices was his main hobby throughout high school. After high school, Denk completed the mandatory 15-month stint in the German army and spent the next 3 years at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. In 1981 he moved to Zurich to study at the
ETH (colloquially) , former_name = eidgenössische polytechnische Schule , image = ETHZ.JPG , image_size = , established = , type = Public , budget = CHF 1.896 billion (2021) , rector = Günther Dissertori , president = Joël Mesot , a ...
. During this time, he also worked in the lab of Dieter Pohl, at the IBM laboratory. There he built one of the first super-resolution microscopes and developed a passion for scanning microscopy. He did his Master’s thesis in the lab of
Kurt Wüthrich Kurt Wüthrich (born 4 October 1938 in Aarberg, Canton of Bern) is a Swiss chemist/biophysicist and Nobel Chemistry laureate, known for developing nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) methods for studying biological macromolecules. Education and ...
, under the direct guidance of Gerhard Wagner. But he felt that NMR spectroscopy was not for him because it did not involve enough opportunities to create new experimental gadgets. In 1984 Denk joined the lab of Watt W. Webb at Cornell. While Webb himself was extremely interested in methods – both fluorescence-correlation and photo bleaching-recovery spectroscopy had been invented in his lab – he gave students and postdocs a lot of freedom. Denk enjoyed his time at Cornell but was almost fired after he went to Greece for six weeks to study monk seals. Given a second chance, he started a project aimed at measuring the motion of sensory hair-bundles in the inner ear. One of the attractions of this endeavor was that it required a stay in San Francisco, in order to learn from Jim Hudspeth and his group about hair-cells in general and specifically how to prepare them for the planned measurements. Denk returned to Cornell and invented a method sensitive enough to measure the thermal movement of hair-bundles. He went on to show that hair cells can sense their own
Brownian motion Brownian motion, or pedesis (from grc, πήδησις "leaping"), is the random motion of particles suspended in a medium (a liquid or a gas). This pattern of motion typically consists of random fluctuations in a particle's position insi ...
. Central to Denk's early career was his intuition that two-photon (2p) imaging might damage the sample less than one-photon confocal imaging. He predicted this in spite of the fact that peak light intensity for 2p is almost one million times higher than for the confocal microscope. Equally important was his insight that infrared 2p excitation would allow scattered fluorescence to contribute to images even deep in turbid samples, improving the optical access and resolution of 2p imaging over what was possible using confocal imaging. Nowhere has this proven more valuable than when imaging neurons in living brain tissue. Two-photon microscopy remains the only technique that allows the recording of activity in living brains with high spatial resolution. 2p excitation can also be used to map cells' receptor distributions by releasing substances from their chemical "cages". Denk later demonstrated that 2p can be utilized to record activity in the visually stimulated retina. He also showed that it can be combined with adaptive optics to improve resolution, and with amplified pulses to push the depth limit to 1mm in brain tissue. Today, two-photon excitation microscopy is also used in the fields of physiology, embryology and tissue engineering, as well as in cancer research. The sparsity of data on connectivity between neurons had been a major limitation in circuit neuroscience. Denk’s 2004 paper describing automated serial blockface microscopy rekindled the dormant science of comprehensive neural circuit mapping (
connectomics Connectomics is the production and study of connectomes: comprehensive maps of connections within an organism's nervous system. More generally, it can be thought of as the study of neuronal wiring diagrams with a focus on how structural connectivi ...
), pioneered by Sydney Brenner. Denk, now Director at the Max Planck Institute for Biological Intelligence (formerly
Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology The Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology was a research institute of the Max Planck Society located in Martinsried, a suburb of Munich in Germany. It existed between 1984 and 2022 and merged with the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology to the new, ...
), continues working to improve techniques for circuit-mapping in the rodent brain. His most recent work involves precisely determining the positions, orientations, and identities of proteins and bound ligands in cryo-preserved cells.


Notable papers

Denk, Stricker & Webb1990, Science. Two-photon laser scanning fluorescence microscopy Denk 1994, Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. Two-photon scanning photochemical microscopy: mapping ligand-gated ion channel distribution Yuste & Denk 1995, Nature. Dendritic spines as basic functional units of neuronal integration Svoboda, Tank & Denk 1996, Science. Direct measurement of coupling between dendritic spines and shafts. Euler, Detwiler & Denk 2002, Nature. Directionally selective calcium signals in dendrites of starburst amacrine cells. Denk & Horstmann 2004, PLoS Biology. Serial Block-Face Scanning Electron Microscopy to Reconstruct Three-Dimensional Tissue Nanostructure Helmchen & Denk 2005, Nature Methods. Deep tissue two-photon microscopy Briggman et al. 2011, Nature. Wiring specificity in the direction-selectivity circuit of the retina Helmstaedter et al. 2013, Nature. Connectomic reconstruction of the inner plexiform layer in the mouse retina


Recognition

* 1998 Young Investigator Award of the Biophysical Society * 2000 Rank Prize for Opto-Electronics * 2003
Leibniz Prize The Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize (german: link=no, Förderpreis für deutsche Wissenschaftler im Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz-Programm der Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft), in short Leibniz Prize, is awarded by the German Research Foundation to ...
of the DFG (German Research Council) * 2006 W. Alden Spencer Award, Columbia University, New York * 2012
Kavli Prize The Kavli Prize was established in 2005 as a joint venture of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters, the Norwegian Ministry of Education and Research, and the Kavli Foundation. It honors, supports, and recognizes scientists for outstan ...
in Neuroscience, Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters * 2013 Elected International member American National Academy of Sciences (NAS) * 2013
Rosenstiel Award The Lewis S. Rosenstiel Award for Distinguished Work in Basic Medical Research is awarded by Brandeis University. It was established in 1971 "as an expression of the conviction that educational institutions have an important role to play in the en ...
* 2015 Brain Prize (Grete Lundbeck European Brain Research Foundation) * 2015 International Prize for Translational Neuroscience of the Gertrud Reemtsma Foundation


Service

* 2014 Member of the
European Molecular Biology Organization The European Molecular Biology Organization (EMBO) is a professional, non-profit organization of more than 1,800 life scientists. Its goal is to promote research in life science and enable international exchange between scientists. It co-funds cour ...
(EMBO) * 2015 Member of the
German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina The German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina (german: Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher Leopoldina – Nationale Akademie der Wissenschaften), short Leopoldina, is the national academy of Germany, and is located in Halle (Saale). Founded ...
* 2016 Member of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities


References


External links


Homepage of the department Electrons - Photons - Neurons
* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Denk, Winfried 1957 births Living people Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize winners Cornell University alumni Members of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters Foreign associates of the National Academy of Sciences Kavli Prize laureates in Neuroscience Members of the German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina Max Planck Institute directors