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1.
Type 1 polyaxonal (PA1) amacrine cells have been identified previously in rabbit retina, and their morphological characteristics have been described in detail in the preceding paper. Like other polyaxonal amacrine cells they bear distinct dendritic and axonal branching systems, the latter of which originates in two to six thin, branching axons which emerge from or near to the cell body. Unlike other types of polyaxonal amacrine cells, however, their branching is stratified at the a/b sublaminar border and their cell bodies are most often displaced interstitially in the inner plexiform layer (IPL). This report emphasizes quantitative features of the population of PA1 cells, documented in Golgi-impregnated and Nissl-stained retinas, and provides further evidence in Nissl preparations for the amacrine-cell nature of polyaxonal amacrine cells. The cell bodies of Golgi-impregnated PA1 amacrine cells are relatively large: 12-15 microns in equivalent diameter over the range extending from the visual streak 6 mm into ventral retina. Over the same range, dendritic trees are 400-800 microns in equivalent diameter, but they are much smaller than the axonal arborizations, which extend up to and perhaps beyond 2 mm from the cell body. Interstitial cell bodies appropriate to PA1 cells have been identified in Nissl-stained, whole-mounted rabbit retinas. In the plane of the retina, these are comparable in area to smaller medium-size ganglion cells, but their very pale Nissl staining, high nuclear/cytoplasmic ratio, and absence of nucleolar staining are all characteristics of amacrine cells. Interstitial displacement of presumed PA1 cells is rare in the visual streak, and the frequency of interstitial cells reaches a peak between 1 and 2 mm ventral to the streak. Counts in Nissl-stained retinas and estimates from nearest neighbor analyses in these and in Golgi-impregnated retinas indicate a density of PA1 cells in the range of 15-16 cells/mm2 at about 2 mm ventral to the streak, when an estimated 25% shrinkage of the material is taken into account. Dendritic field overlap, based upon this estimate, is calculated to be about fourfold, while a lower bound to estimates of the overlap of axonal arborizations is nearly an order of magnitude higher. Many similarities are noted in a qualitative and quantitative comparison of PA1 amacrine cells in rabbit and monkey retinas. In assessing the contribution of the structural organization of PA1 amacrine cells to their possible functional role(s), it is notable that their appearance conforms not to amacrine cells as commonly viewed, but to a more conventional model of neuronal dynamic polarization.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)-immunoreactive (IR) amacrine cells of the rabbit retina mature during the first four postnatal weeks, and their cellular development is described in the preceding paper (Casini, G., and N.C. Brecha, J. Comp. Neurol. 326:283-301, 1992). The present investigation is a quantitative analysis of the postnatal development of the TH-IR amacrine cell population. TH-IR amacrine cells gradually increase in size from birth (soma area of 44.7 +/- 12.4 microns2, mean +/- standard deviation) to adulthood (144.2 +/- 28.0 microns2). Cell density slightly increases from postnatal day (PND) 0 (41.9 +/- 9.5 cells/mm2) to PND 6 (47.2 +/- 7.2 cells/mm2), then markedly decreases from PND 6 to adulthood (17.8 +/- 5.3 cells/mm2) as a consequence of retinal growth. TH-IR cell number almost doubles from PND 0 (about 4,100 cells/retina) to adulthood (about 7,850 cells/retina). The increase in the total number of TH-IR amacrine cells can be explained by the generation of new TH-IR cells in the inner nuclear layer, a delay in the expression of the TH phenotype after neurogenesis by cells committed to be dopaminergic, or the acquisition of this dopaminergic phenotype by uncommitted cells. The development of the TH-IR amacrine cell mosaic was assessed by an evaluation of the distribution of nearest neighbor distances of TH-IR cells. There is a poor correlation between this distribution and a theoretical nonrandom distribution before PND 12. After this age, the nearest neighbor distance distribution shifts towards a nonrandom distribution, and is similar to that of the TH-IR amacrine cell population in the adult retina. The establishment of the TH-IR amacrine cell population mosaic is likely to be achieved through different interacting events, including intrinsic (e.g., genetic) factors, environmental influences, and nonuniform retinal growth. Overall, the population parameters analyzed in the present study approach adult values about the time of eye opening (PND 12) and they reach adult values by PND 26.  相似文献   

3.
The present and accompanying (Casini, G., and N.C. Brecha, J. Comp. Neurol. 326:302-313, 1992) papers investigate the postnatal development of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)-immunoreactive (IR) amacrine cells in the rabbit retina. This study is focused on a detailed analysis of the patterns of cellular growth and differentiation of TH-IR amacrine cells, which serve as a model to gain insights into the mechanisms underlying developmental changes associated with the maturation of amacrine cells. Faintly staining TH-IR neurons are present in the proximal inner nuclear layer of newborn retinas. They are characterized by a large nucleus and usually a single primary process lacking varicosities. At postnatal day (PND) 6, TH-IR processes display more complex morphological characteristics, including a few varicosities, and second- and third-order ramifications. Growth cones are often seen. At PNDs 10 and 12 (eye opening), TH-IR cells have general morphological characteristics similar to adult TH-IR amacrines. They display 2-5 primary processes, which start forming a complex network of fibers in lamina 1 of the inner plexiform layer (IPL). TH-IR processes are also present in lamina 3 and rarely in lamina 5 of the IPL. Many fibers ending in growth cones are observed. In addition, very rare, thin TH-IR fibers are present in the outer plexiform layer. At PND 19, TH-IR fibers form a complex, dense network in lamina 1 of the IPL, and loose networks in laminae 3 and 5. Growth cones are not observed at this age. At PND 26, a few "ring-like" structures formed by TH-IR fibers in lamina 1 of the IPL are observed for the first time. In adult retinas, the "ring-like" structures are more numerous than at PND 26. A second, rare type of TH-IR cell ("type B") is encountered in all retinal regions beginning at PND 10. These cells are characterized by weak immunostaining and a small soma size. The present findings show that a significant differentiation of TH-IR neurons occurs during the first 10-12 PNDs. Eye opening is an important period for the maturation of TH-IR amacrines and, more generally, for the maturation of the IPL.  相似文献   

4.
Polyaxonal amacrine cells are a new class of amacrine cell bearing one to six branching, axon-like processes, closely resembling the axons of Golgi type II cells found elsewhere in the central nervous system. Of the four types of polyaxonal amacrine cell that we have recognized in rabbit retina, three have been described previously in brief communications, and one is the subject of this paper. Type 1 polyaxonal (PA1) amacrine cells have larger cell bodies than most amacrine cells in Golgi preparations, averaging about 13 microns in diameter. These are typically positioned interstitially in the middle of the inner plexiform layer (IPL), although some are also found in the amacrine and ganglion cell layers. Axons and dendrites are broadly stratified in the middle of the IPL, in the vicinity of the a/b sublaminar border. Sparsely branching dendrites have a conventional appearance, branching at a narrow angle, and giving rise to smaller daughter branches, which taper gradually toward their termination. An unusual feature of the dendrites is the zig-zag course of some terminal branches. Clusters of small, pedunculated spines are common on proximal dendrites, and spines are virtually absent on axons. Axons emerge from proximal dendrites within 50 microns of the soma, and more rarely from the soma, in a tapering initial segment, commonly interrupted by one or two large swellings. Subsequent branching is at a wide angle, and the fine caliber is maintained in the transition from parent to daughter branches. The uniform thickness of the axonal branches is interrupted at intervals by boutons en passant. Although the extent of the dendritic tree is large, exceeding 500 microns in radial extent from the cell body, for cells a few millimeters distant from the visual streak, the axonal tree is much larger, and its radial extent is measured in millimeters. PA1 amacrine cells are believed to be polarized in their functional organization, with a primarily recipient dendritic tree and a primarily transmissive axonal tree. PA1 amacrine cells co-stratify with nab cone bipolar cells and with certain small tufted amacrine and ganglion cells at the a/b sublaminar border. The co-stratification of both axons and dendrites at the a/b sublaminar border of the IPL suggests that PA1 amacrine cells are important modulators of neural activity in the middle of the IPL, affecting both ON and OFF responses, and perhaps ON-OFF cells selectively.  相似文献   

5.
Polyaxonal (PA) amacrine cells are a new class of amacrine cell bearing one to six branching, axon-like processes that emerge from the cell body or dendritic trees within 50 microns of the cell body. These slender processes of uniform caliber branch at right angles and in many respects closely resemble the axons of Golgi type II cells found elsewhere in the brain. Of the four types of polyaxonal amacrine cell that we have recognized in rabbit retina, two have been described previously in brief communications. One of these, the PA1 amacrine cell with its interstitially displaced cell body, located in the inner plexiform layer (IPL), has been analyzed extensively in two preceding reports. This paper concerns PA2, PA3, and PA4 amacrine cells. Type 2 polyaxonal (PA2) amacrine cells, identified in Golgi preparations of whole-mounted rabbit retinas, have smaller cell bodies (9-14 microns) than the other three types and these are always displaced to the ganglion cell layer (GCL) or the inner border of the inner plexiform layer (IPL). The dendritic fields of PA2 cells are also smaller than those of other PA amacrine cells, and most of their sparse dendritic branching is narrowly stratified at the border of strata (S) 4 and 5. Some members of this more heterogeneous amacrine cell "type" are bistratified, however, and more highly branched with terminal branches rising to end in S1. PA2 amacrine cells bear a scattering of small dendritic spines and may also exhibit complex dendritic appendages arising at the ends of terminal branches in proximal regions of the dendritic tree. PA2 cells emit one to three axons from the proximal dendritic tree, and about half of the cells bear a single axon. Type 3 polyaxonal (PA3) amacrine cells resemble PA1 cells in the large size of their cells bodies (11-16 microns) and dendritic fields, but differ from the latter in placement of cell bodies, which is in the GCL, and dendritic and axonal stratification, which is multistratified, ranging from S4 to S1, with a concentration in S3 or S4 and a variable contribution to S1. PA3 cells differ from PA1 cells in several other respects, including dendritic branching which occurs at higher frequency and is biased toward temporal retina, and in characteristic bristling dendritic spines, clustered in the intermediate regions of the dendritic tree, that are longer, more variable in appearance and more tightly clustered than the small, uniform spines of PA1 cells that are clustered on proximal dendrites.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
The mechanism underlying transmitter release from retinal horizontal cells is poorly understood. We investigated the possibility of vesicular transmitter release from mammalian horizontal cells by examining the expression of synaptic proteins that participate in vesicular transmitter release at chemical synapses. Using immunocytochemistry, we evaluated the cellular and subcellular distribution of complexin I/II, syntaxin-1, and synapsin I in rabbit retina. Strong labeling for complexin I/II, proteins that regulate a late step in vesicular transmitter release, was found in both synaptic layers of the retina, and in somata of A- and B-type horizontal cells, of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)- and glycinergic amacrine cells, and of ganglion cells. Immunoelectron microscopy demonstrated the presence of complexin I/II in horizontal cell processes postsynaptic to rod and cone ribbon synapses. Syntaxin-1, a core protein of the soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive-factor attachment protein receptor (SNARE) complex known to bind to complexin, and synapsin I, a synaptic vesicle-associated protein involved in the Ca(2+)-dependent recruitment of synaptic vesicles for transmitter release, were also present in the horizontal cells and their processes at photoreceptor synapses. Photoreceptors and bipolar cells did not express any of these proteins at their axon terminals. The presence of complexin I/II, syntaxin-1, and synapsin I in rabbit horizontal cell processes and tips suggests that a vesicular mechanism may underlie transmitter release from mammalian horizontal cells.  相似文献   

7.
A physiologically identified on-off directionally selective (DS) ganglion cell with its preferred-null axis defined was stained with horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and prepared for electron microscopy. A continuous series of thin sections were used to examine the cell's synaptology. Although the DS cell dendrite received the majority of its synaptic input from a heterogeneous population of amacrine cell processes, a frequently observed synaptic profile consisted of a DS cell dendrite receiving synapses from a cluster of several amacrine cell processes. These clusters of processes were assumed to be from a fascicle of amacrine cells, most of which probably belonged to several different cholinergic starburst amacrine cells. The most frequently observed presynaptic profile within the clusters consisted of a synaptic couplet in which two processes synapsed with each other before one of them finally synapsed with the DS ganglion cell dendrite; occasionally, a chain of three serial synapses was seen. In addition, a specific microcircuit that has the potential to exert lateral feedforward inhibition was also observed. This microcircuit consisted of two cone bipolar cell terminal dyad synapses where one dyad contained an amacrine cell process making a reciprocal synapse and a DS ganglion cell dendrite receiving direct excitation; the other dyad synapse, found lateral to the first dyad, contained two amacrine cell processes that both made reciprocal synapses, but one fed forward to make a putative inhibitory synapse with the DS cell dendrite.  相似文献   

8.
We examined the morphology and physiological response properties of the axon-bearing, long-range amacrine cells in the rabbit retina. These so-called polyaxonal amacrine cells all displayed two distinct systems of processes: (1) a dendritic field composed of highly branched and relatively thick processes and (2) a more extended, often sparsely branched axonal arbor derived from multiple thin axons emitted from the soma or dendritic branches. However, we distinguished six morphological types of polyaxonal cells based on differences in the fine details of their soma/dendritic/axonal architecture, level of stratification within the inner plexiform layer (IPL), and tracer coupling patterns. These morphological types also showed clear differences in their light-evoked response activity. Three of the polyaxonal amacrine cell types showed on-off responses, whereas the remaining cells showed on-center responses; we did not encounter polyaxonal cells with off-center physiology. Polyaxonal cells respected the on/off sublamination scheme in that on-off cells maintained dendritic/axonal processes in both sublamina a and b of the IPL, whereas processes of on-center cells were restricted to sublamina b. All polyaxonal amacrine cell types displayed large somatic action potentials, but we found no evidence for low-amplitude dendritic spikes that have been reported for other classes of amacrine cell. The center-receptive fields of the polyaxonal cells were comparable to the diameter of their respective dendritic arbors and, thus, were significantly smaller than their extensive axonal fields. This correspondence between receptive and dendritic field size was seen even for cells showing extensive homotypic and/or heterotypic tracer coupling to neighboring neurons. These data suggest that all polyaxonal amacrine cells are polarized functionally into receptive dendritic and transmitting axonal zones.  相似文献   

9.
The amacrine cells of the retina are a complex family of interneurons. They are made up of numerous subgroups, each with different morphologic and/or biochemical properties and each presumably serving a different function. In this study, we characterized one subgroup, defined by its expression of a peptide, neuropeptide Y (NPY). The cells were identified using antibodies to NPY and characterized using a transgenic mouse line that expressed the reporter enzyme, beta-galactosidase, in the NPY-immunoreactive (NPY-IR) cells. We found that NPY-IR cells were present in two layers, the inner nuclear layer (INL) and the ganglion cell layer (GCL). The cells in both layers were densely distributed, with those in the INL having a mean density of 1452 +/- 65 cells/mm(2), and those in the GCL having a mean density of 644 +/- 41 cells/mm(2). The cells in the INL extended their processes in the sublamina of the inner plexiform layer (IPL) closest to the INL/IPL border, the presumptive OFF sublamina, and the cells in the GCL extended their processes in the sublamina near the GCL/IPL border, the presumptive ON sublamina. Both populations of cells were immunoreactive to a GABA transporter and, thus, likely GABAergic. The high density of these cells suggests that they play a prominent role in IPL processing. The location of their processes suggests that one population acts in the pathway that mediates OFF responses, and the other in the pathway that mediates ON responses, and their expression of a GABA marker indicates that their actions are likely inhibitory.  相似文献   

10.
A monoclonal antibody directed at the multiphosphorylated epitope of axonal neurofilament-H (NF-H) was used to label axon-like fibers in the rabbit retina. NF-H-immunopositive fibers were found in the outer plexiform layer (OPL), inner plexiform layer (IPL), and optic fiber layer (OFL). The morphological characteristics of the labeled processes identified those in the OPL as horizontal cell axons and axon terminals and fibers in the OFL as axons of ganglion cells. The NF-H-positive profiles in the OPL formed a subset of horizontal cell processes labeled for calbindin. In the IPL, NF-H-immunoreactive profiles lay at all levels but were detected most often in the middle strata, 2-4. Occasionally, we observed NF-H-immuoreactive processes emerging from the IPL and entering either the GCL or the inner nuclear layer (INL). The labeled fibers in the IPL were typically very thin, less than 1 microm in diameter, and could often be followed for over 1 mm as they ran laterally across the retina. Cell bodies were never labeled by the immunoserum. To identify the NF-H-immunopositive fibers in the IPL, standard immunocytochemical double-labeling techniques were applied, using antibodies directed against several neurotransmitters or modulators thought to be expressed by axon-bearing amacrine cells. The NF-H-positive processes in the IPL were found to correspond to those labeled for tyrosine hydroxylase, somatostatin, substance P, and NADPH diaphorase activity. However, the NF-H labels did not colocalize with those against the vasoactive intestinal peptide-associated protein PHM27. Our results indicate that putative axons in the retina possess the multiphosphorylated NF-H protein found within classic axons in the central nervous system. These results thus support the idea that certain subtypes of amacrine and horizontal cells maintain true axons in the mammalian retina.  相似文献   

11.
To learn more about neuropeptide-induced glial responses which accompany axon regeneration, we studied effects of VIP on laminin production by cultured Schwann cells. Schwann cells were isolated from sciatic nerves of neonatal mice, purified, and incubated for 5 days in either control medium (DMEM + 15% FCS) or control medium containing 10−7 -10−11 M VIP. At 10−7 and 10−8 M VIP, laminin levels measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay were significantly higher (55% and 35%) than those in control cultures. Lower VIP concentrations (10−9 -10−11 M) produced smaller increases which were not significant. Low-affinity VIP receptors which mediated this effect were demonstrated on Schwann cells by radioligand binding studies. The increased Schwann cell synthesis of laminin induced by VIP was blocked when either a VIP antagonist or a VIP receptor antagonist was added to the VIP-containing incubation medium. In contrast to astrocytes, when Schwann cells were loaded with fura-2, VIP did not increase cytosolic Ca2+. This indicates that Schwann cells and astrocytes may have different intracellular transduction pathways; their receptor subtypes also may differ. We suggest that the VIP-induced increase in laminin synthesis which we have observed in cultured Schwann cells may also occur in vivo and might be an important component of axon-Schwann cell interactions during nerve regeneration. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

12.
Somatostatin (SRIF) is a neuroactive peptide that is distributed throughout the nervous system, including the retina. This peptide has been localized to populations of amacrine cells in a variety of vertebrate species. In the rabbit retina, SRIF immunoreactivity is present in a sparse population of medium to large neurons (13.72 μm in diameter, or 147.84 μ2) in the ganglion cell layer and in a small number of neurons in the inner nuclear layer. These cells display a preferential distribution to the inferior retina, with the highest density near the ventral and ventrolateral retinal margins (11.33 cells/mm2). SRIF-immunoreactive cells have two to five primary processes that arborize in the proximal inner plexiform layer (IPL). These give rise to a plexus of finer processes in the distal IPL. Occasional immunoreactive processes are also present in the outer plexiform layer. In the IPL, these laminar networks are present in all retinal regions. In addition, SRIF-immunoreactive cells often have a fine-caliber axonlike process that eminates from the soma or perisomal region. These processes travel for great distances across the retina in either the nerve fiber layer or in the distal IPL but are never seen to enter the optic nerve head. In addition, the number of SRIF-immunoreactive somata remains unchanged following transection of the optic nerve. Taken together, these data indicate that SRIF-immunoreactive neurons of the rabbit retina are displaced amacrine cells. Furthermore, the sparse distribution of SRIF-immunoreactive somata, the wide-ranging, asymmetric arborization of their cellular processes, and previous pharmacological studies suggest that these neurons mediate a broad modulatory role in retinal function. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
The synaptic organization of starburst amacrine cells was studied by electron microscopy of individual or overlapping pairs of Golgi-impregnated cells. Both type a and type b cells were analyzed, the former with normally placed somata and dendritic branching in sublamina a, and the latter with somata displaced to the ganglion cell layer and branching in sublamina b. Starburst amacrine cells were thin-sectioned horizontally, tangential to the retinal surface, and electron micrographs of each section in a series were taken en montage. Cell bodies and dendritic trees were reconstructed graphically from sets of photographic montages representing the serial sections. Synaptic inputs from cone bipolar cells and amacrine cells are distributed sparsely and irregularly all along the dendritic tree. Sites of termination include the synaptic boutons of starburst amacrine cells, which lie at the perimeter of the dendritic tree in the "distal dendritic zone." In central retina, bipolar cell input is associated with very small dendritic spines near the cell body in the "proximal dendritic zone." The proximal dendrites of type a and type b cells generally lie in planes or "strata" of the inner plexiform layer (IPL), near the margins of the IPL. The boutons and varicosities of starburst amacrine cells, distributed int he distal dendritic zone, lie in the "starburst substrata," which occupy a narrow middle region in each of the two sublaminae, a and b, in rabbit retina. As a consequence of differences in stratification, proximal and distal dendritic zones are potentially subject to different types of input. Type b starburst amacrines do not receive inputs from rod bipolar terminals, which lie mainly in the inner marginal zone of the IPL (stratum 5), but type a cells receive some input from the lobular presynaptic appendages of rod amacrine cells in sublamina a, at the border of strata 1 and 2. There is good correspondence between boutons or varicosities and synaptic outputs of starburst amacrine cells, but not all boutons gave ultrastructural evidence of presynaptic junctions. The boutons and varicosities may be both pre- and postsynaptic. They are postsynaptic to cone bipolar cell and amacrine cell terminals, and presynaptic primarily to ganglion cell dendrites. In two pairs of type b starburst amacrine cells with overlapping dendritic fields, close apposition of synaptic boutons was observed, raising the possibility of synaptic contact between them. The density of the Golgi-impregnation and other technical factors prevented definite resolution of this question. No unimpregnated profiles, obviously amacrine in origin, were found postsynaptic to the impregnated starburst boutons.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Edward V. Famiglietti  Jr.   《Brain research》1983,261(1):138-144
Golgi-impregnated 'starburst' amacrine cells share significant morphological features with cholinergic neurons in rabbit retina. They are mirror-symmetrical about the a/b (OFF/ON) sublaminar border of the inner plexiform layer. Type a starburst amacrines have cell bodies in the amacrine cell layer and dendrites in sublamina a, while type b cells have their cell bodies in the ganglion cell layer and dendrites in sublamina b of the inner plexiform layer (IPL). The two levels of narrow dendritic stratification are precisely those demonstrated by Masland and Mills for cholinergic amacrine cells. The morphological evidence indicates that the duality of ON and OFF pathways is served separately by type b (displaced) and type a starburst amacrine cells, respectively.  相似文献   

15.
Vesicular transporters play an essential role in the packaging of glutamate for synaptic release and so are of particular importance in the retina, where glutamate serves as the neurotransmitter for photoreceptors, bipolar cells, and ganglion cells. In the present study, we have examined the distribution of the three known isoforms of vesicular glutamate transporter (VGLUT) in the cat retina. VGLUT1 was localized to all photoreceptor and bipolar cells, whereas VGLUT2 was found in ganglion cells. This basic pattern of complementary distribution for the two transporters among known populations of glutamatergic cells is similar to previous findings in the brain and spinal cord. However, the axon terminals of S-cone photoreceptors were found to express both VGLUT1 and VGLUT2 and some ganglion cells labeled for both VGLUT2 and VGLUT3. Such colocalizations suggest the existence of dual modes of regulation of vesicular glutamate transport in these neurons. Staining for VGLUT2 was also present in a small number of varicose processes, which were seen to ramify throughout the inner plexiform layer. These fibers may represent axon collaterals of ganglion cells. The most prominent site of VGLUT3 immunoreactivity was in a population of amacrine cells; the axon terminals of B-type horizontal cells were also labeled at their contacts with rod spherules. The presence of the VGLUT3 transporter at sites not otherwise implicated in glutamate release may indicate novel modes of glutamate signaling or additional roles for the transporter molecule.  相似文献   

16.
The morphology, dendritic branching patterns, and dendritic stratification of retinal ganglion cells have been studied in Golgi-impregnated, whole-mount preparations of rabbit retina. Among a large number of morphological types identified, two have been found that correspond to the morphology of ON and ON-OFF directionally selective (DS) ganglion cells identified in other studies. These cells have been characterized in the preceding paper in terms of their cell body size, dendritic field size, and branching pattern. In this paper, the two kinds of DS ganglion cell are compared in terms of their levels of dendritic stratification. They are compared with each other and also with examples of class III.1 cells, defined in the preceding paper with reference to our previous studies. Studies employing computer-aided, 3D reconstruction of dendritic trees, as well as analysis of a pair of ON DS and ON-OFF DS ganglion cells with overlapping dendritic trees show that the two types of DS ganglion cell partly co-stratify in the middle of sublamina b (stratum 4). The report that some ON DS ganglion cells extend a few dendrites into sublamina a is confirmed. The study of pairs of ON-OFF DS ganglion cells and starburst amacrine cells with overlapping dendritic trees reveals a precise co-stratification of these two cell types, and many points of close apposition of starburst boutons with ON-OFF DS ganglion cell dendrites in both sublaminae of the inner plexiform layer (IPL). This is confirmed by high-resolution light microscopy and by electron microscopy. It is possible to conclude, therefore, that ON DS are also partly co-stratified with type b starburst (cholinergic) amacrine cells, and are apparently also partly co-stratified with type a starburst amacrine cells, when occasional dendrites rise to that level. The co-stratification of the two kinds of DS ganglion cell is consistent with the sharing of some inputs in common, including some cone bipolar cell inputs. The co-stratification of both with starburst amacrine cells agrees with the physiological demonstration of the powerful pharmacological effects upon ON and ON-OFF DS ganglion cells reported for cholinergic agonists. The major difference in the dendritic stratification of bistratified ON-OFF DS ganglion cells and generally unistratified ON DS ganglion cells is consistent with the bisublaminar organization of ON and OFF pathways in the IPL. The problem of occasional branches of ON DS cells in sublamina a is discussed in terms of a threshold for OFF responses.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
S M Sagar 《Brain research》1987,426(1):157-163
A commercially obtained antiserum to vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) was used with the avidin-biotin-peroxidase immunohistochemical method to localize VIP-like immunoreactivity in the adult rabbit retina. A population of cell bodies in the inner nuclear layer is specifically stained. The cells are most dense in the central retina (40-50 cells/mm2), and least numerous in the superior periphery (15-20 cells/mm2). The dendritic fields overlap extensively; cells in the periphery have dendritic fields up to 1 mm in diameter. The processes of the cells are in the inner plexiform layer, where they tend to form a tristratified pattern in sublayers 1, 3 and 5. This pattern of lamination is similar to that described by other laboratories for dopaminergic amacrine cells and provides further evidence for an interaction between these two neuromodulators.  相似文献   

18.
In the cat retina, [3H]muscimol is localized in 5 morphologically distinct sub-populations of neurons with cell bodies in the amacrine layer and in other neurons located in the ganglion cell layer. Mu¨ller cells are unlabeled. The labeled subpopulations in the amacrine layer correspond to the subpopulations which also exhibit preferential uptake of [3H]GABA. The [3H]muscimol-labeled cells include interplexiform cells and type-AI reciprocal amacrine cells.  相似文献   

19.
In the retina, somatostatin influences neuronal activity likely by acting at one or more somatostatin subtype (sst) receptors. Somatostatin and somatostatin-binding sites are distributed predominantly to the inner retina. The present study has investigated the cellular expression of one of the sst receptors, the sst2A receptor isoform, in the rabbit retina. These studies have used a new polyclonal antibody directed to the predicted C-terminus of mouse sst2A(361–369) receptor. Antibody specificity was tested by preadsorption of the primary antibody with a peptide corresponding to sst2A(361–369). sst2A Receptor immunoreactivity was localized mainly to the plasma membrane of rod bipolar cells and to sparsely occurring, wide-field amacrine cells. Immunostaining in rod bipolar cells was strongest in the axon and axon terminals in lamina 5 of the inner plexiform layer (IPL) and was weakest in the cell body and dendrites. Double-labeling experiments using a monoclonal antibody against protein kinase C (PKC; α and β), a rod bipolar cell-selective marker, showed complete colocalization. In horizontal sections of retina, immunostained bipolar cell bodies had a dense distribution, which is in agreement with the reported distribution of rod bipolar cell bodies. Immunoreactive amacrine cell bodies were located at the border of the inner nuclear layer and the IPL, and thin varicose processes ramified mainly in laminae 2 and 4 of the IPL. These observations indicate that somatostatin influences visual information processing in the retina 1) by acting presynaptically on rod bipolar cell axon terminals and b) by influencing the activity of sparsely occurring amacrine cells. J. Comp. Neurol. 393:93–101, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

20.
Dopaminergic amacrine cells in the cat retina   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Autoradiographic studies of cat retina showed an accumulation of [3H]dopamine in a subpopulation of amacrine cells whose process ramify in the outermost stratum of the inner plexiform layer. Dendrites of these cells are characterized by numerous varicosities measuring up to 2 μm in diameter which are connected by fine intervaricose segments. The dopaminergic amacrine cells are presynaptic to other labeled cells and to unlabeled amacrine populations but not to bipolar or ganglion cells. [3H]Dopamine-labeled processes provide extensive synaptic input to the somata and lobular appendages of type AII amacrine cells. This relationship suggests that dopaminergic amacrine cells may play an important role in the regulation of rod pathways in the cat retina.  相似文献   

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