Regular Mosaics of Large Displaced and Non-Displaced Ganglion Cells in the Retina of a Cichlid Fish.
Mosaico Regular de Grandes Células ganglionares deslocadas e não-deslocadas na retina de um peixe ciclídeo.
Autor: JEREMY E. COOK AND DAVID L. BECKER.
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ABSTRACT
Large retinal
ganglion cells in the tilapid cichlid fish Oreochromis spilurus (standard length
15-54 mm) were filled with horseradish peroxidase and studied in flatmounts.
Three types, with distinct patterns of dendritic stratification, formed
spatially independent, nonrandamics. One type (about 0.3% of all ganglion
cells) resembled the outer (off) alpha cells of mammals. They were very large,
with thick primary dendrites and large, sparsely branched planar trees in the
outer part of the inner plexiform layer (IPL). About 300 were arrayed regularly
across each retina, their exact number and spacing depending on its size. Their
somata were often displaced into the IPL, even where neighbours in the mosaic
were orthotopic. Another type (0.8%) resembled the inner (on) alpha cells of
mammals. These had slightly smaller somata that were never displaced and smaller trees in the
middle layers of the IPL. About 800 were arrayed uniformly and regularly across
each retina. A rarer type (0.06-0.08%) had two planar trees: one forming a
coarse mosaic in the outer part of the inner plexiform layer (co-planar with
the trees of outer alpha-like cells) and another in the outer plexiform layer.
These “biplexiform” cells were smaller and rounder than alpha-like cells and
always displaced. The dendrites were finer and less tapered. Cells in which we
could identify an outer plexiform tree failed to cover the retina completely,
but were nonrandomly distributed. We draw three main conclusions: (1) some
nonmammalian vertebrates have separate inner and outer mosaics of large
ganglion cells like those of mammals, (2) the vertical displacement of ganglion
cell somata can vary widely within a single mosaic and may thus be functionally
irrelevant, and (3) biplexiform ganglion cells exist in fish but differ in
morphology from the biplexiform types described in some other vertebrates.
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