Literature DB >> 2487081

The appearance and distribution of microglia in the developing retina of the rat.

K W Ashwell1, H Holländer, W Streit, J Stone.   

Abstract

We have examined the development of microglia in the rat retina, using a peroxidase-conjugated lectin derived from Griffonia simplicifolia. Retinas were studied from animals aged from E(embryonic day)12, just after the invagination of the optic cup and prior to the closure of the optic fissure, to adulthood. The lectin also proved a sensitive label for the endothelial cells of the developing retina. Our results provide some support for the view that microglia are derived from the monocyte-macrophage series of blood cells. At E12, most labeled cells were found at the vitreal surface, suggesting that they had come from the hyaloid circulation, while some had entered the retina and appeared to be migrating towards its ventricular surface. From E14 to early postnatal ages, most labeled cells had processes and resembled the amoeboid microglial cells described in silver carbonate staining studies (Ling, 1982). The number of labeled cells rose from about 700 to E14 to a peak of about 27,000 at P(postnatal day)7, and fell to about 19,600 by P12. As early as E16, a regularity was apparent in the distribution of microglial cells over the surface of the retina, the cells tending to avoid each other. Microglial cells are found throughout the thickness of the very young retina, but as the layers of the retina differentiate, they are increasingly restricted to the inner half of the retina. Our findings indicate that microglia enter the retina well before the period of neuronal death, making it unlikely that they invade the retina solely in response to cell death. Our results confirm however that, once in the retina, microglia become associated with, and appear to phagocytose, the pyknotic debris which appears during the period of neuronal death. They also become closely associated with the retinal vasculature. In the adult, the intensity of the labeling of microglia was much reduced. Those cells which were labeled appeared more differentiated, resembling the "resting microglia" described in earlier studies.

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Year:  1989        PMID: 2487081     DOI: 10.1017/s0952523800012335

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vis Neurosci        ISSN: 0952-5238            Impact factor:   3.241


  30 in total

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2.  Labelling of retinal microglial cells following an intravenous injection of a fluorescent dye into rats of different ages.

Authors:  X X Zeng; Y K Ng; E A Ling
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3.  Apoptotic cell death and microglial cell responses in cultured rat retina.

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4.  A lectin histochemistry study on the development of rat microglial cells.

Authors:  J Boya; J L Calvo; A L Carbonell; A Borregon
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Review 5.  Cell replacement and visual restoration by retinal sheet transplants.

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Review 6.  Microglial interactions with the neurovascular system in physiology and pathology.

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8.  Lectin labelling of amoeboid microglial cells in the brain of postnatal rats.

Authors:  C Kaur; E A Ling; W C Wong
Journal:  J Anat       Date:  1990-12       Impact factor: 2.610

9.  Haemopoietic phagocytes in the early differentiating avian retina.

Authors:  M A Cuadros; M García-Martín; C Martin; A Ríos
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10.  A quantitative and morphometric study of the transformation of amoeboid microglia into ramified microglia in the developing corpus callosum in rats.

Authors:  C H Wu; C Y Wen; J Y Shieh; E A Ling
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