Glycinergic amacrine cells of the rat retina
✍ Scribed by Menger, Nicole; Pow, David V.; Wässle, Heinz
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 888 KB
- Volume
- 401
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9967
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Physiological studies of neurons of the inner retina, e.g., of amacrine cells, are now possible in a mammalian retinal slice preparation. The present anatomical study characterizes glycinergic amacrine cells of the rat retina and thus lays the ground for such future physiological and pharmacological experiments. Rat retinae were immunolabeled with antibodies against glycine and the glycine transporter-1 (GLYT-1), respectively. Glycine immunoreactivity was found in approximately 50% of the amacrine and 25% of the bipolar cells. GLYT-1 immunoreactivity was restricted to glycinergic amacrine cells. They were morphologically characterized by the intracellular injection of Lucifer Yellow followed by GLYT-1 immunolabeling. Eight different types of glycinergic amacrine cells could be distinguished. They were all small-field amacrine cells with bushy dendritic trees terminating at different levels within the inner plexiform layer. The well-known AII amacrine cell was encountered most frequently. From our measurements of the dendritic field sizes and the density of glycinergic cells, we estimate that there are enough glycinergic amacrine cells available to make sure that all eight types and possibly more tile the retina regularly with their dendritic fields.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
In all mammalian retinae studied to date, starburst cholinergic amacrine cells are a consistently occurring cell type. Here, we show that the cone-dominated retina of the tree shrew also has starburst cells with the characteristic radially symmetric branching pattern known from other species. Dendri
## Abstract Mosaic of cholinergic amacrine cells (green, labeled for choline acetyltransferase) in the ganglion cell layer of the mouse retina. The somal patterning of the mosaic is degraded due to the presence of blood vessels (white, labeled for PNA) and fascicles of optic axon (magenta, labeled
## Abstract Mosaic of cholinergic amacrine cells (green, labeled for choline acetyltransferase) in the ganglion cell layer of the mouse retina. The somal patterning of the mosaic is degraded due to the presence of blood vessels (white, labeled for PNA) and fascicles of optic axon (magenta, labeled
The authors wish to point out an error in Figure 10 of this paper. Dendrites in this schematic drawing are shown in red and axons are shown in green, not the reverse as indicated in the key to the originally published version. A corrected figure and the correct legend for this figure are shown below