This paper describes the first demonstration of taurine-like immunoreactivity in the mammalian retina using an antiserum raised in rabbits. In rat, cat and guinea pig retina a peroxidase-antiperoxidase immunocytochemical technique showed high levels of taurine immunostaining in photoreceptor inner segments and synaptic terminals, in subpopulations of amacrine and bipolar somata and their synaptic processes in the inner plexiform layer, including numerous large terminals near and on ganglion cell somata. Using the Protein A-gold technique for ultrastructural studies in the rat, the presence of synaptic ribbons confirmed that some of these taurine-containing terminals were from bipolar cells. Lower levels of immunostaining were seen in the pigment epithelium and distal parts of glial cells.
Taurine immunoreactivity in one micron sections of the adult rat optic nerve was observed using light microscopy. Prominent staining was seen in glial cell somata in the perinuclear region and in their processes throughout the nerve, particularly in endfeet on capillaries and in the peripheral basal lamina (glia limitans). Axons and blood vessels showed relatively little or no staining in the mature nerve. The pattern of glial fibrillary acidic protein immunoreactivity on subsequent sections was similar in many respects to that of taurine, suggesting that a sub-population of taurine immunoreactive glial cells are optic nerve astrocytes.
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