In vivo staining of oligodendroglia in the rabbit retina
β Scribed by B. Ehinger; C. L. Zucker; A. Bruun; A. Adolph
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 875 KB
- Volume
- 10
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0894-1491
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
We have discovered that a strongly fluorescent dye, sulforhodamine 101, when injected intravitreally in vivo, very effectively stains a class of star-shaped cells in the innermost layers of the rabbit retina. The cells were strictly confined to the region containing medullated fibers and emitted dichotomously branching processes that ended up running some distance along the myelinated fibers. In favorable cases they could be seen to ensheath the fibers in a tube-like fashion. No other retinal cells were stained. Shortly (hours) after the injection, the stain appeared in the cell cyi,oplasm, but it later became progressively more localized to intracellular granules. Most ofthe dye had disappeared after 2 days.
Oligodendrocytes and astrocytes are the only cells known to be confined to the region of the medullated fibers in the rabbit retina, and hence the sulforhodamine 101-stained cells should be one of these two types. Sulforhodamine 101-stained cells were indistinguishable from oligodendrocytes identified by 2',3'-cyclic nucleotide phospliodiesterase (CNP) immunohistochemistry, and sequential staining showed them to be the same. Sulforhodamine 101-stained cells were microinjected with lucifer yellow ,after lightly fixing rabbit retinas with formaldehyde and were found to be indistinguishable from oligodendrocytes. Glial fibrillary acidic protein staining for astrocytes showed fiber bundles that to some extent were similar to the bundles stained by sulforhodamine 101, but at the level of individual fibers, it was impossible to establish any concordance. Suiforhodamine 101 thus appears to stain oligodendrocytes rather than astrocytes in the rabbit retina.
A related dye, rhodamine 123, also stained rabbit oligodendrocytes, bbt with poor contrast because many other cells and structures were also stained. A number of related rhodamine dyes did not stain the rabbit oligodendrocytes.
The staining procedure is simple, has wide tolerance margins, gives robust results, and is well suited for cell microinjections and similar experiments. o 1994 WiIey-Liss, Inc.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Microglial cells (MCs) are active sensors and reactive phagocytes of neural tissues. They are known to migrate and accumulate in areas of neuronal damage. Thus, microglial locomotion is an essential feature of the inflammatory reaction in neural tissue. Yet, to our knowledge there has b
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 r