The profile of glutamine synthetase (GS) activity in the neural retina of chicken embryos and adults was studied alongside the in vivo spatio-temporal patterns of generation and morphogenesis of Müller cell and of retinal synaptogenesis. The rise of GS activity during development is not related to Müller cell differentiation but to synaptogenesis in the outer plexiform layer (opl). GS expression was investigated by immunoreaction with GS-specific antiserum. Three spatial gradients of decreasing labeling were observed between embryonic (E)15 and E18, from central to peripheral retina, dorsal to ventral, and temporal to nasal, which are in spatio-temporal relationship with synaptogenesis in the opl. GS is localized in Müller cells and apparently also in a population of astrocyte-like glial cells, located in the ganglion cell layer throughout the retina. Precocious induction by hydrocortisone, in ovo, at E10, does not show the spatial pattern of GS immunoreactivity observed in control retinas at the time of natural induction (E15). We also show that dissociated (non-cultured) Müller cells of E18-20 retinas, to which only photoreceptors or photoreceptors and neurons remain joined, maintain an immunodetectable level of GS, while those in isolated state lose GS immunoreactivity rapidly. Our results suggest that the induction of GS expression might be mediated by Müller cell-neuron interactions at the opl and also perhaps at the outer nuclear layer (onl). An analysis of our results and those of previous authors suggests that the level of GS in differentiated Müller cells could be determined by conjoint cell interactions at the onl, opl, and inner plexiform layer.
This work is a morhological study of the centrifugal fibers in the chick retina. We have classified these fibers in two types: type I centrifugal fibers and type I1 centrifugal fibers. Type 1 centrifugal fibers constitute a new model of axonic terminal in the birds retina. These fibers terminate exclusively in the inner plexiform layer where they show long tangential trajectories. Type 11 centrifugal fibers are coincident with classical ones previously described in the avian retina. With the Golgi method we describe new levels of terminations of these type I1 centrifugal fibers.
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