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1.
GABA-like immunoreactivity in the cat retina: electron microscopy   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The synaptic organization of the cat retina was studied with antibodies against the GABA-GA (glutaraldehyde)-BSA (bovine serum albumin) complex. The postembedding technique combined with immunogold labelling ensured ultrastructural preservation and made identification of synapses possible. The most common putative GABA-ergic synapses in the inner plexiform layer were amacrine-to-bipolar-cell synapses followed by amacrine-to-ganglion-cell and amacrine-to-amacrine-cell synapses. GABA-immunoreactive amacrine cells received most of their synaptic input from bipolar cells followed by other amacrine cells. Synapses between two labelled amacrine cells were common. Rod bipolar cells were the predominant input source and also the preferred output target of GABA-labelled amacrine cells. OFF- and ON-ganglion cells received putative GABA-ergic synapses at their dendrites in laminas a and b, respectively, and also at their somata. In the outer plexiform layer, synapses of interplexiform cells onto bipolar cell dendrites expressed GABA-like immunoreactivity. In both the cone pedicles and the rod spherules, GABA-like immunoreactivity was observed in horizontal cell processes.  相似文献   

2.
Colocalization of indoleamine uptake and GABA-like immunoreactivity was studied in the cat retina. Consecutive, semithin sections were incubated in antisera to either 5-HT (5-hydroxytryptamine) or GABA. More than 90% of all 5-HT-accumulating amacrine cells expressed GABA-like antigens. With the same approach, the colocalization of 5-HT uptake and GABA-like immunoreactivity was studied in rabbit and 75-80% of the 5-HT-accumulating amacrine cells expressed GABA-like immunoreactivity, thus confirming a previous study (Osborne and Beaton, 1986). Since, in both cat and rabbit, endogenous 5-HT could not be found by immunocytochemistry, one must consider the possibility that some GABAergic amacrine cells take up indoleamines. In the cat retina, antibodies against tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) label dopaminergic amacrine cells (Oyster et al., 1985). By incubating consecutive, semithin sections in antisera to either TH or GABA, it was found that 84% of the dopaminergic amacrine cells also expressed GABA-like immunoreactivity. GABA-like immunoreactivity and 3H-muscimol uptake were found to be colocalized in more than 90% of the amacrine cells labeled. However, dopaminergic amacrine cells did not accumulate 3H-muscimol. Evidence is presented from colocalization studies for 2 types of interplexiform cell in the cat retina. One is stained by GABA-like immunocytochemistry and by 3H-muscimol uptake. The other is the dopaminergic amacrine cell, which also expresses GABA-like immunoreactivity, but does not accumulate 3H-muscimol.  相似文献   

3.
The distribution of GABA-like immunoreactivity in the macaque monkey retina was studied by using postembedding techniques on semithin and ultrathin sections. At the light microscopic level, both inner and outer plexiform layers showed strong GABA-like immunoreactivity in the central retina. All the horizontal cells, some bipolar cells, 30-40% of amacrine cells, occasional interplexiform cells, and practically all displaced amacrine cells were labeled. In the peripheral retina (beyond 5 mm eccentricity), the outer plexiform layer and the horizontal cells were not labeled, but all other cell types showed the same labeling pattern as in the central retina. Synapses of the inner plexiform layer involving a pre- or postsynaptic GABA-labeled process were studied electron microscopically. Synapses involving a GABA-labeled presynaptic amacrine cell process made up 80% of the synapses observed. These GABA-labeled amacrine processes synapsed onto amacrine, bipolar, and ganglion cell processes as well as onto amacrine and ganglion cell bodies. Synapses involving a postsynaptic GABA-labeled process made up 20% of the synapses studied. The GABA-like immunoreactive processes were postsynaptic to bipolar cells at the dyads and to amacrine cells at conventional synapses.  相似文献   

4.
The anatomical substrates of spatial and color vision in the primate retina are investigated by measuring the immunoreactivity and spatial density of bipolar, amacrine and horizontal cells in the inner nuclear layer of the macaque monkey retina. Bipolar cells can be distinguished from amacrine and horizontal cells by their differential immunoreactivity to antisera against glutamate, glycine, GABA, parvalbumin, calbindin (CaBP D-28K), and the L7 protein from mouse cerebellum. The spatial density of bipolar cells is compared to the densities of photoreceptors and ganglion cells at different retinal eccentricities. In the centralmost 2 mm, cone bipolar cells outnumber ganglion cells by about 1.4:1. The density of cone bipolar cells is thus high enough to allow for input to different (parasol and midget) ganglion cell classes by different (diffuse and midget) bipolar cell classes. The density gradient of cone bipolar cells follows closely that of ganglion cells in central retina but falls less steeply in peripheral retina. This suggests that the convergence of cone signals to the receptive fields of ganglion cells in the peripheral retina occurs in the inner plexiform layer. The density of cone bipolar cells is 2.5-4 times that of cones at all eccentricities studied, implying that cone connectivity to bipolar cells remains constant throughout the retina. Different subgroups of bipolar cells are distinguished by their relative immunoreactivity to the different antisera. All rod and cone bipolar cells show moderate to strong glutamate-like immunoreactivity. The bipolar cells that show weak to moderate GABA-like immunoreactivity are also labeled with the antiserum to the L7 protein and are thus identified as rod bipolar cells. Nearly half of all cone bipolar cells showed glycine-like immunoreactivity. The results suggest that the inhibitory neurotransmitter candidates GABA and glycine are segregated respectively in rod and cone bipolar cell pathways. A diffuse, cone bipolar cell type can be identified by the anti-parvalbumin and the anti-calbindin antisera. All horizontal cells show parvalbumin-like immunoreactivity. Nearly all amacrine cells show GABA-like or glycine-like immunoreactivity; a variety of subpopulations also show immunoreactivity to one or more of the other markers used.  相似文献   

5.
Neuropeptide Y (NPY), an inhibitory neuropeptide expressed by a moderately dense population of wide-field amacrine cells in the rat retina, acts through multiple (Y1-y6) G-protein-coupled receptors. This study determined the cellular localization of Y1 receptors and the synaptic connectivity of Y1 processes in the inner plexiform layer (IPL) of the rat retina. Specific Y1 immunoreactivity was localized to horizontal cell bodies in the distal inner nuclear layer and their processes in the outer plexiform layer. Immunoreactivity was also prominent in cell processes located in strata 2 and 4, and puncta in strata 4 and 5 of the IPL. Double-label immunohistochemical experiments with calbindin, a horizontal cell marker, confirmed Y1 immunostaining in all horizontal cells. Double-label immunohistochemical experiments, using antibodies to choline acetyltransferase and vesicular acetylcholine transporter to label cholinergic amacrine cell processes, demonstrated that Y1 immunoreactivity in strata 2 and 4 of the IPL was localized to cholinergic amacrine cell processes. Electron microscopic studies of the inner retina showed that Y1-immunostained amacrine cell processes and puncta received synaptic inputs from unlabeled amacrine cell processes (65.2%) and bipolar cell axon terminals (34.8%). Y1-immunoreactive amacrine cell processes most frequently formed synaptic outputs onto unlabeled amacrine cell processes (34.0%) and ganglion cell dendrites (54.1%). NPY immunoreactivity in the rat retina is distributed primarily to strata 1 and 5 of the IPL, and the present findings, thus, suggest that NPY acts in a paracrine manner on Y1 receptors to influence both horizontal and amacrine cells.  相似文献   

6.
A monoclonal antibody (mAb 62-3G1) to the GABAA receptor/benzodiazepine receptor/Cl- channel complex from bovine brain was used with light and electron microscopy in goldfish retina and light microscopy in chicken retina to localize GABAA receptor immunoreactivity (GABAr-IR). GABAr-IR was found in the outer plexiform layer (OPL) in both species, in three broad bands in the inner plexiform layer (IPL) of goldfish, and in seven major bands of the chicken IPL. A small percentage of amacrine cell bodies (composing at least three types) were stained in chicken. In goldfish OPL, GABAr-IR was localized intracellularly and along the plasma membrane of cone pedicles, whereas rod spherules were lightly stained, but always only intracellularly. In chicken, all three sublayers of the OPL were GABAr-IR. The presence of GABAr-IR on photoreceptor terminals is consistent with data indicating feedback from GABAergic horizontal cells to cones. In the goldfish IPL, GABAr-IR was localized to postsynaptic sites of amacrine cell synapses; intracellular staining of processes in the IPL also was observed in presumed "GABAergic" targets. A comparison of GABAr-IR with the distributions of 3H-muscimol uptake/binding, glutamate decarboxylase-IR, GABA-IR, and 3H-GABA uptake in the IPL showed either a reasonable correspondence or mismatch, depending on the marker, species, and lamina within the IPL. The distribution of GABAr-IR in the retina corresponded better with the 3H-muscimol than with 3H-benzodiazepine binding patterns yet overall was in excellent agreement with many other physiological and anatomical indicators of GABAergic function. We suggest that intracellular GABAr-IR represents the biosynthetic and/or degradative pathway of the receptor and we conclude that mAb 62-3G1 is a valid marker of GABAA receptors in these retinas and will serve as a useful probe with which to address the issue of mismatches between the localization of GABAA receptors and indicators of presynaptic GABAergic terminals.  相似文献   

7.
Substance P-like immunoreactive amacrine cells in the cat retina   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Substance P-like immunoreactivity was localized by immunocytochemical techniques to two subpopulations of amacrine cells in the cat retina. One cell was a unistratified amacrine with processes ramifying within stratum 4 of the inner plexiform layer. The other cell type was a bistratified cell with processes in both stratum 1 (s1) and stratum 4 (s4). Both cell types were seen with their somas displaced to the ganglion cell layer as well as in the conventional amacrine location in the inner nuclear layer. Substance P cells were present in the greatest density within the area centralis and decreased in number toward the periphery. The ratio of amacrine to displaced amacrine cells also decreased peripherally. However, the coverage by immunoreactive fibers in s4 remained three times that seen in s1. Computer-assisted analysis confirmed the location of substance P-containing processes at 5-15% (s1) and 50-70% (s4) depth levels in the inner plexiform layer. A comparison of substance P-like immunoreactivity in light- and dark-adapted cat retinas showed no apparent differences in the distribution of immunoreactivity due to lighting conditions.  相似文献   

8.
C T Lin  H Z Li  J Y WU 《Brain research》1983,270(2):273-283
The regional distribution and cellular location of GABA-synthesizing enzyme, L-glutamate decarboxylase (GAD), GABA degrading enzyme, GABA-transaminase (GABA-T), taurine synthesizing enzyme, cysteine sulfinic acid decarboxylase (CSAD), aspartate and glutamate converting enzyme, aspartate aminotransferase (AAT), and somatostatin have been visualized in the rat retina by immunocytochemical methods. GAD immunoreactivity was found to be concentrated in the inner plexiform layer. A moderate to weak staining of GAD was found in the inner nuclear layer. The distribution of GABA-T immunoreactivity was similar to that of GAD with the exception that a weak to moderate staining of GABA-T was also observed in the outer plexiform layer. CSAD immunoreactivity was seen in every layer with the heaviest staining in the inner plexiform layer, and moderate staining in the inner and outer nuclear layers and ganglion cell layer. AAT immunoreactivity was mostly concentrated in the outer nuclear layer; there was weak staining in the inner nuclear layer and inner and outer plexiform layer. Dense somatostatin staining was seen in the inner plexiform layer and moderate staining was present in the inner nuclear layer, outer plexiform layer and ganglion cell layer. These findings suggest that in rat retina, GABA-containing cells occur in some types of amacrine cells only, while taurine and somatostatin appear in both amacrine and horizontal cells. AAT immunoreactivity was primarily associated with the photoreceptor cells suggesting that AAT may be used as a marker for aspartergic/glutamergic cells and their endings in the central nervous system.  相似文献   

9.
The regional distribution and cellular location of GABA-synthesizing enzyme, l-glutamate decar☐ylase (GAD), GABA degradating enzyme, GABA-transaminase (GABA-T), taurine synthesizing enzyme, cysteinesulfinic acid decar☐ylase (CSAD), aspartate and glutamate converting enzyme, aspartate aminotrasferase (AAT), and somatostatin have been visualized in the rat retina by immunocytochemical methods. GAD immunoreactivity was found to be concentrated in the inner plexiform layer. A moderate to weak staining of GAD was found in the inner nuclear layer. The distribution of GABA-T immunoreactivity was similar to that of GAD with the exception that a weak to moderate staining of GABA-T was also observed in the outer plexiform layer. CSAD immunoreactivity was seen in every layer with the heaviest staining in the inner plexiform layer, and moderate staining in the inner and outer nuclear layers and ganglion cell layer. AAT immunoreactivity was mostly concentrated in the outer nuclear layer; there was weak staining in the inner nuclear layer and inner and outer plexiform layer. Dense somatostatin staining was seen in the inner plexiform layer and moderate staining was present in the inner nuclear layer, outer plexiform layer and ganglion cell layer. These findings suggest that in rat retina, GABA-containing cells occur in some types of amacrine cells only, while taurine and somatostatin appear in both amacrine and horizontal cells. AAT immunoreactivity was primarily associated with the photoreceptor cells suggesting that AAT may be used as a marker for aspartegic/glutamergic cells and their endings in the central nervous system.  相似文献   

10.
Amacrine cells in the ganglion cell layer of the cat retina   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Following transection of the optic nerve, ganglion cells in the cat retina undergo retrograde degeneration. However, many small profiles (less than or equal to 10 micron) survive in the ganglion cell layer. Previously considered to be neuroglia, there is now substantial evidence that they are displaced amacrine cells. Their density increases from approximately 1,000 cells/mm2 in peripheral retina to 7,000 cells/mm2 in the central area. Their total number was found to be 850,000, which is five times the number of ganglion cells and also five times the number of astrocytes. Uptake of 3H-muscimol followed by autoradiography labelled 75% of the displaced amacrine cells; hence, the majority seem to be GABAergic. Immunocytochemistry with an antibody directed against choline-acetyl-transferase labelled approximately 10% of the displaced amacrines in the peripheral retina and 17% in the central area. Uptake of serotonin (5-HT) followed by immunocytochemistry was found in 25-30% of displaced amacrines. NADPH diaphorase histochemistry labelled approximately 5% of displaced amacrine cells. The sum of the various percentages make colocalization likely. Intracellular injection of Lucifer Yellow under microscopic control revealed that displaced amacrine cells constitute several morphological types.  相似文献   

11.
The distribution of the neuroactive amino acids glutamate, GABA, and glycine in the human retina was examined in consecutive semithin sections treated with antisera specific for fixed glutamate, GABA, and glycine, respectively. Glutamate immunoreactivity was conspicuous in all photoreceptor cells (rods more strongly labelled than cones), and in a majority (85-89%) of the cells in the inner nuclear layer (INL). Rod spherules and cone pedicles showed a greater enrichment of glutamate immunoreactivity than the parent cell bodies and inner segments. Also, structures of the inner plexiform layer (IPL) were labelled. A large majority (83-91%) of cells in the ganglion cell layer (GCL) was strongly stained, as were most axons in the nerve fibre layer. Müller cell processes appeared unstained. GABA immunoreactivity was present in presumed amacrine but not in bipolar-like cells. The stained cells were restricted to the inner 1/3 of the INL and were more frequent in central than in peripheral retina (40% and 26% of all cells in the inner 1/2 of INL, respectively). GABA positive cell processes, probably originating from interplexiform cells, appeared to traverse the INL and end in the outer plexiform layer. Dense immunolabeling was found in the IPL. GABA immunoreactive cells (some also stained for glutamate) comprised 23% of all GCL cells in the peripheral retina, but only 5% in the central retina. Most of them were localized adjacent to the IPL. A few GABA positive (possibly ganglion) cells extended a single fibre toward the nerve fibre layer. Solitary GABA positive fibres were seen in this layer and in the optic nerve. Glycine immunoreactivity was observed in cells with the location typical of amacrine and bipolar (peripheral retina) cells, as well as in punctate structures of the IPL. In contrast to the GABA positive cells, the glycine positive cells were more frequent in the peripheral than in the central retina (42% and 23% of all cells in inner 1/3 of INL, respectively). A few cells in the GCL (0.5-1.5%) were glycine positive. Glutamate colocalized with GABA or glycine in a majority of the cells stained for either of these inhibitory transmitters (90-95% of the GABA positive cells, and 80-86% of the glycine positive cells, in the INL). Some bipolar cells were stained for both glutamate and glycine. Colocalization of GABA and glycine occurred in a subpopulation (3-4%) of presumed amacrine cells, about half of which was also glutamate positive.  相似文献   

12.
The expression of the calcium-binding protein calretinin was analysed by immunohistochemistry techniques in the retina of turbot (Psetta maxima) from embryonic to juvenile stages. Calretinin immunoreactivity was first detected in retinae from newly hatched larvae, in which the anlage of the inner plexiform layer and a subset of amacrine and ganglion cells displayed a faint immunolabelling. First appearance of photoreceptors during larval life coincided with an increase in the intensity of the labelling. During subsequent larval development, the expression of calretinin affected distinctive retinal components. The inner plexiform layer, optic fiber layer, and a population of amacrine and ganglion cells were invariably labelled. Occasional bipolar cells were labelled at the end of the larval period. By metamorphosis, calretinin is sequentially expressed in horizontal cells, and bipolar immunoreactive cells become numerous. The pattern of calretinin immunoreactivity of the inner plexiform layer changes from the larval to juvenile period. In all cases, calretinin immunoreactivity exhibited variations between the peripheral retina, which contains the most recently differentiated retinal components, and the remainder of the differentiated retina. Our results suggest that the progressive expression of calretinin in the turbot retina appears associated with some degree of neuronal differentiation. Once the definitive pattern of calretinin immunoreactivity is established in the turbot retina, both similarities and differences with the calretinin location in the retina of other vertebrates can be demonstrated.  相似文献   

13.
Using immunocytochemistry, a type of amacrine cell that is immunoreactive for aquaporin 1 was identified in the mouse retina. AQP1 immunoreactivity was found in photoreceptor cells of the outer nuclear layer (ONL) and in a distinct type of amacrine cells of the inner nuclear layer (INL). AQP1-immunoreactive (IR) amacrine cell somata were located in the INL and their processes extended through strata 3 and 4 of the inner plexiform layer (IPL) with thin varicosities. The density of the AQP1-IR amacrine cells increased from 100/mm(2) in the peripheral retina to 350/mm(2) in the central retina. The AQP1-IR amacrine cells comprise 0.5% of the total amacrine cells. The AQP1-IR amacrine cell bodies formed a regular mosaic, which suggested that they represent a single type of amacrine cell. Double labeling with AQP1 and glycine, gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) or GAD(65) antiserum demonstrated that the AQP1-IR amacrine cells expressed GABA or GAD(65) but not glycine. Their synaptic input was primarily from other amacrine cell processes. They also received synaptic inputs from a few cone bipolar cells. The primary synaptic targets were ganglion cells, followed by other amacrine cells and cone bipolar cells. In addition, gap junctions between an AQP1-IR amacrine process and another amacrine process were rarely observed. In summary, a GABAergic amacrine cell type labeled by an antibody against AQP1 was identified in the mouse retina and was found to play a possible role in transferring a certain type of visual information from other amacrine or a few cone bipolar cells primarily to ganglion cells.  相似文献   

14.
The tree shrew (Tupaia belangeri) has a cone-dominated retina with a rod proportion of only 5%. This is in contrast to the usual mammalian pattern of rod-dominated retinae. Rod bipolar cells are present at relatively low densities in the tree shrew retina, suggesting that a reduced, but normal, rod pathway might be preserved. The present study investigated another common constituent of the rod pathway, the dopaminergic amacrine cells, and analysed their morphology and distribution by light and electron microscopy. Catecholaminergic (presumed dopaminergic) amacrine cells were labelled with an antibody against tyrosine hydroxylase (TH). Intense TH-immunoreactivity was found in perikarya and dendrites of a uniform amacrine cell population. TH-immunoreactive amacrine cell density varies across the retina from 10 cells/mm2 in the periphery to 40 cells/mm2 in more central regions (mean cell density about 25 cells/mm2). The relatively large cell bodies are located exclusively in the innermost part of the inner nuclear layer. The dendrites form a dense plexus at the border between the inner plexiform layer and the inner nuclear layer. The finer dendritic processes contain many varicosities and form characteristic dendritic "rings" like those seen in other mammals. TH-immunoreactive processes also run between cell bodies in the vitread inner nuclear layer; a few extend into the sclerad inner nuclear layer and occasionally reach the outer plexiform layer (possible interplexiform cells). A few TH-immunoreactive processes are seen in the middle of the inner plexiform layer. Electron microscopy of TH-immunoreactive processes revealed conventional synapses onto somata and processes of unlabelled amacrine cells.  相似文献   

15.
Immunocytochemistry was used to localize the populations of tyrosine-hydroxylase-like (TH)-immunoreactive cells in the tiger salamander retina. Ninety percent of these cells possessed somas that were situated in the innermost cell row of the inner nuclear layer and were classified as amacrine cells. Ten percent of TH-immunoreactive somas were located in the ganglion cell layer and were tentatively designated as those of displaced amacrine cells. The processes of TH-immunoreactive cells ramified most heavily in sublayer 1 of the inner plexiform layer, while a relatively small number of TH-labelled processes distributed in sublayers 3 and 5. Less than 1% of TH-immunoreactive cells in the amacrine cell layer exhibited a short process of somal origin that extended distally toward the outer plexiform layer. However, these processes did not cross the whole of the inner nuclear layer, and no immunolabelling was observed in the outer plexiform layer. An examination of retinal whole-mounts revealed that TH-immunoreactive amacrine and displaced amacrine cells were distributed throughout the center and periphery of the retina. The density of TH-immunolabelled amacrine cells was calculated to be 49 +/- 13 (mean +/- standard error) cells per mm2. The vast majority of TH-immunoreactive amacrine and displaced amacrine cells exhibited a stellate appearance and gave rise to three or more primary dendrites. A few TH-amacrine and displaced amacrine cells possessed two primary dendrites that emerged from opposite sides of their somas. The processes of TH-immunoreactive cells were generally poorly branched and varicose with terminal branches sometimes appearing thin and beaded. Because some TH-immunolabelled processes were very long, there was considerable overlap between the dendritic fields of neighboring TH-cells. Lastly, individual TH-immunoreactive amacrine and displaced amacrine cells were often observed in whole-mounts to provide processes that ramified at more than one level of the inner plexiform layer.  相似文献   

16.
The recently cloned GABAB receptors were localized in rat retina using specific antisera. Immunolabelling was detected in the inner and outer plexiform layers (IPL, OPL), and in a number of cells in the inner nuclear layer and the ganglion cell layer. Double-labelling experiments for GABA (γ-aminobutyric acid) and GABAB receptors, respectively, demonstrated a co-localization in horizontal cells and amacrine cells. Electron microscopy showed that GABAB receptors of the OPL were localized presynaptically in horizontal cell processes invaginating into photoreceptor terminals. In the IPL, GABAB receptors were present presynaptically in amacrine cells, as well as postsynaptically in amacrine and ganglion cells. The postnatal development of GABAB receptors was also studied, and immunoreactivity was observed well before morphological and synaptic differentiation of retinal neurons. The present results suggest a presynaptic (autoreceptor) as well as postsynaptic role for GABAB receptors. In addition, the extrasynaptic localization of GABAB receptors could indicate a paracrine function of GABA in the retina.  相似文献   

17.
Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) is a neuroactive substance that is expressed in both nonmammalian and mammalian retinas. This study investigated the morphology and synaptic connections of VIP-containing neurons in the guinea pig retina by immunocytochemistry, by using antisera against VIP. Specific VIP immunoreactivity was localized to a population of wide-field and regularly spaced amacrine cells with processes ramifying mainly in strata 1 and 2 of the inner plexiform layer (IPL). Double-label immunohistochemistry demonstrated that all VIP-immunoreactive cells possessed gamma-aminobutyric acid immunoreactivity. The synaptic connectivity of VIP-immunoreactive amacrine cells was identified in the IPL by electron microscopy. The VIP-labeled amacrine cell processes received synaptic input from other amacrine cell processes and bipolar cell axon terminals in strata 1 to 3 of the IPL. The most frequent postsynaptic targets of VIP-immunoreactive amacrine cells were other amacrine cell processes in strata 1 to 3 of the IPL. Synaptic outputs to bipolar cells were also observed in strata 1 to 3 of the IPL. In addition, ganglion cell dendrites were also postsynaptic to VIP-immunoreactive neurons in the sublamina a of the IPL. These studies show that one type of VIP-immunoreactive amacrine cells make contact predominantly with other amacrine cell processes. This finding suggests that VIP-containing amacrine cells may influence inner retinal circuitry, thus mediating visual processing.  相似文献   

18.
High K+ medium and glutamate elicited a significant [3H]-GABA release in the golden hamster retina. High K+ -induced GABA release was largely calcium-dependent, while the effect of glutamate was Ca2+ -independent. After replacing Na+ by Li+, glutamate-evoked [3H]-GABA release was abolished, while high K+ -evoked release remained unchanged. The effect of glutamate was completely blocked by DNQX but not by APV. Furthermore, kainate induced [3H]-GABA release, whereas NMDA was ineffective. Assessment of endogenous GABA efflux further confirmed results obtained for [3H]-GABA. GABA-like immunoreactivity was observed in amacrine cells, in neurons localized in ganglion cell layer, as well as in fibers and terminals at the inner plexiform layer. In addition a few horizontal cells showed GABA-like immunolabeling. The present results suggest the existence of at least two pools of GABA in the hamster retina, compatible with both vesicular and carrier-mediated mechanisms of transmitter release, being the amacrine cells the main gabaergic source in this tissue.  相似文献   

19.
Bistratified amacrine cells of the turtle retina containing enkephalin-like immunoreactivity were examined with the electron microscope with the aid of peroxidase immunocytochemical techniques. Our goal was to determine the nature and the location of the synaptic contacts of these cells and the intracellular localization of the immunoreactivity. There was a diffuse reaction product throughout the cytoplasm which coated the surfaces of all the organelles and a dense reaction product which filled the core of some large cytoplasmic vesicles (130 nm in dia.). These labeled amacrine cells received conventional synaptic contacts from other unlabeled amacrine cells and ribbon synaptic contacts from unlabeled bipolar cells, in both the proximal and distal inner plexiform layer. These enkephalin-positive amacrine cells made conventional synaptic contacts containing unlabeled synaptic vesicles (60 nm in dia.), with ganglion cells in the proximal inner plexiform layer and with bipolar cells in the distal inner plexiform layer. These results suggest that enkephalin-like material coexists with another neurotransmitter within these neurons and that these amacrine cells are able to integrate information from both amacrine cells and bipolar cells and provide synaptic input to bipolar cells, ganglion cells, and possibly other amacrine cells.  相似文献   

20.
Glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD), the synthesizing enzyme for the neurotransmitter GABA, has been localized in goldfish retina using a new antiserum. We observed at least six types of GAD-immunoreactive amacrine cells, one of which was large and pyriform (Ab type). In addition, immunoreactive synaptic terminals were located throughout the inner plexiform layer (IPL). Amacrine cells that were GAD-immunoreactive also had high-affinity uptake mechanisms for both 3H-GABA and 3H-muscimol that were detectable autoradiographically. Type Ab pyriform amacrine cells were heavily labeled because of 3H-GABA uptake and were GAD-immunoreactive. Other types of GAD-immunoreactive amacrine cells, including a subpopulation of Ab amacrines, were lightly labeled because of 3H-GABA uptake. Because the same neurons that were GAD-immunoreactive also accumulated 3H-GABA and 3H-muscimol, these three are appropriate markers for GABAergic cells in the goldfish retina. However, the uptake of 3H-muscimol by many non-GAD-immunoreactive cells, detectable at longer autoradiographic exposure times, indicates that this label must be used with caution. Thirty percent of goldfish retinal amacrine cells are GABAergic, and their processes are distributed throughout all levels of the IPL. Few GAD-immunoreactive amacrine cells accumulated 3H-glycine, so the goldfish retina contains distinct populations of glycinergic and GABAergic amacrine cells.  相似文献   

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