Julius Bernstein was a German physiologist born in Berlin. His father was Aron Bernstein, a founder of the Reform Judaism Congregation in Berlin 1845; his son was the mathematician Felix Bernstein.
Bernstein's work was concentrated in the fields of neurobiology and biophysics. He is largely recognized for his "membrane hypothesis" in regards to the origin of the "resting potential" and the "action potential" in the nerve. Bernstein correctly proposed that excitable cells are surrounded by a membrane selectively permeable to K+ ions at rest and that during excitation the membrane permeability to other ions increases. His "membrane hypothesis" explained the resting potential of nerve and muscle as a diffusion potential set up by the tendency of positively charged ions to diffuse from their high concentration in cytoplasm to their low concentration in the extracellular solution while other ions are held back. During excitation, the internal negativity would be lost transiently as other ions are allowed to diffuse across the membrane, effectively short-circuiting the K+ diffusion potential. In the English-language literature, the words "membrane breakdown" were used to describe Bernstein's view of excitation.. Bernstein's pioneering research laid the groundwork for experimentation on the conduction of the nerve impulse, and eventually the transmission of information in the nervous system. He is credited with invention of a "differential ", a device used to measure the velocity of bio-electric impulses. The GermanBernstein Network Computational Neuroscience has been named after him.
Written works
, Heidelberg: Winter, 1871 - Experiments on the excitation process in nerve and muscle systems.
Die fünf Sinne des Menschen, Leipzig: Brockhaus, 1875 - The five senses of humans.
Die mechanische Theorie des Lebens, ihre Grundlagen und ihre Erfolge. Braunschweig: Vieweg, 1890 - The mechanical theory of life, etc.
Lehrbuch der Physiologie des thierischen Organismus, im speciellen des Menschen. Stuttgart: F. Enke, 1894 - Textbook of physiology on the "animal organism", etc.
. Braunschweig: Vieweg, 1912 - Book on electrobiology.