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Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 6, 424-438, Copyright © 1986 by Society for Neuroscience
Glial domains and nerve fiber patterns in the fish retinotectal pathway
A Maggs and J Scholes
Optic nerve fibers run parallel from the retina as far as the optic tract
in fish, then suddenly criss-cross into a new pattern matching the tectal
map. This change coincides with a unique demarcation between two astroglial
territories in the retinotectal pathway, located where the optic chiasm
occurs in other vertebrates, which we defined using antibodies directed
against intermediate filaments (IF). We found that astroglia in optic nerve
territory express an Mr 56,000 IF polypeptide, band 3, which we identify as
the fish equivalent of vimentin in mammals. These astrocytic cells lack
glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP; cf. Dahl and Bignami, 1973).
Conversely, glia in brain territory, that is, in the optic tract and
elsewhere in the CNS, lack the fish vimentin, but express GFAP. By electron
microscopy, we obtained evidence that new retinal axons extend swiftly
through the growing optic nerve, where they are tightly shepherded into a
narrow track by newly differentiating glial cells, positive for the fish
vimentin. In the GFAP-positive glial territory of the optic tract, by
contrast, growing axons are slowed down and probably branch. We suggest
that this allows them to fasciculate accurately with older fibers and
thereby propagate a tectotopic pattern established by pioneer axons in the
embryo.
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