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Ultrastructural Circuitry in Retinal Cell Transplants to Rat Retina

The development of five transplants of fetal retinal tissue to adult rat eyes was examined with the electron microscope. The transplants were of 9 to 10 weeks total age after conception in four cases and 20 weeks in one case. They were at stage E15 when transplanted. Transplants developed in both th...

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Autores principales: Zucker, Charles L., Ehinger, Berndt, Seiler, Magdalene, Aramant, Robert B., Adolph, Alan R.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi Publishing Corporation 1994
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2565280/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7819370
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/NP.1994.17
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author Zucker, Charles L.
Ehinger, Berndt
Seiler, Magdalene
Aramant, Robert B.
Adolph, Alan R.
author_facet Zucker, Charles L.
Ehinger, Berndt
Seiler, Magdalene
Aramant, Robert B.
Adolph, Alan R.
author_sort Zucker, Charles L.
collection PubMed
description The development of five transplants of fetal retinal tissue to adult rat eyes was examined with the electron microscope. The transplants were of 9 to 10 weeks total age after conception in four cases and 20 weeks in one case. They were at stage E15 when transplanted. Transplants developed in both the epiretinal and subretinal spaces. The transplants were heterogeneously developed with some parts showing almost normal differentiation and others little. Subretinal transplants examined in this study were more developed than epiretinal grafts. Photoreceptor cells developed both inner and outer segments. Their synaptic terminals possessed output ribbon synapses with postsynaptic processes similar to those seen in normal retinas. In regions corresponding to the inner plexiform layer, the adult complement of synapses was seen, including advanced features such as serial synapses as well as reciprocal synapses at bipolar cell dyads. Incompletely differentiated synapses of both the amacrine and bipolar cell types were often observed, especially in the rat epiretinal transplants. Ganglion cell processes could not be identified with certainty. Although transplant cells were adjacent to host photoreceptor cells and pigment epithelium, obvious specializations or interactions were not observed. The experiments suggest that embryonic rat retinal cell transplants develop most or perhaps all of the structural components and neuronal circuitry necessary to transduce light and process some visual information.
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spelling pubmed-25652802008-10-16 Ultrastructural Circuitry in Retinal Cell Transplants to Rat Retina Zucker, Charles L. Ehinger, Berndt Seiler, Magdalene Aramant, Robert B. Adolph, Alan R. J Neural Transplant Plast Article The development of five transplants of fetal retinal tissue to adult rat eyes was examined with the electron microscope. The transplants were of 9 to 10 weeks total age after conception in four cases and 20 weeks in one case. They were at stage E15 when transplanted. Transplants developed in both the epiretinal and subretinal spaces. The transplants were heterogeneously developed with some parts showing almost normal differentiation and others little. Subretinal transplants examined in this study were more developed than epiretinal grafts. Photoreceptor cells developed both inner and outer segments. Their synaptic terminals possessed output ribbon synapses with postsynaptic processes similar to those seen in normal retinas. In regions corresponding to the inner plexiform layer, the adult complement of synapses was seen, including advanced features such as serial synapses as well as reciprocal synapses at bipolar cell dyads. Incompletely differentiated synapses of both the amacrine and bipolar cell types were often observed, especially in the rat epiretinal transplants. Ganglion cell processes could not be identified with certainty. Although transplant cells were adjacent to host photoreceptor cells and pigment epithelium, obvious specializations or interactions were not observed. The experiments suggest that embryonic rat retinal cell transplants develop most or perhaps all of the structural components and neuronal circuitry necessary to transduce light and process some visual information. Hindawi Publishing Corporation 1994 /pmc/articles/PMC2565280/ /pubmed/7819370 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/NP.1994.17 Text en Copyright © 1994 .
spellingShingle Article
Zucker, Charles L.
Ehinger, Berndt
Seiler, Magdalene
Aramant, Robert B.
Adolph, Alan R.
Ultrastructural Circuitry in Retinal Cell Transplants to Rat Retina
title Ultrastructural Circuitry in Retinal Cell Transplants to Rat Retina
title_full Ultrastructural Circuitry in Retinal Cell Transplants to Rat Retina
title_fullStr Ultrastructural Circuitry in Retinal Cell Transplants to Rat Retina
title_full_unstemmed Ultrastructural Circuitry in Retinal Cell Transplants to Rat Retina
title_short Ultrastructural Circuitry in Retinal Cell Transplants to Rat Retina
title_sort ultrastructural circuitry in retinal cell transplants to rat retina
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2565280/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7819370
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/NP.1994.17
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