TY - JOUR T1 - Starburst amacrine cells: morphological constancy and systematic variation in the anisotropic field of rabbit retinal neurons JF - The Journal of Neuroscience JO - J. Neurosci. SP - 562 LP - 577 DO - 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.05-02-00562.1985 VL - 5 IS - 2 AU - EV Famiglietti Y1 - 1985/02/01 UR - http://www.jneurosci.org/content/5/2/562.abstract N2 - Starburst amacrine cells of rabbit retina have been characterized previously in terms of their highly distinctive and regular dendritic geometry. They have been identified as probable cholinergic neurons of the retina and have been shown to direct output solely to ganglion cells. The objectives of this paper are to chart the variation of starburst amacrine cells across the retina, to register the morphological features which are held constant for individual cells, and to examine factors which may remain invariant for the population with change in retinal position. Starburst amacrine cells occur as two completely segregated mirror-symmetrical populations, type a and type b cells, separately serving OFF and ON pathways, respectively. They are treated here as two distinct subpopulations with very similar features. A characteristic morphological feature of both types, related to branching pattern and best seen in flat view, is the location of boutons in the distal annular zone. This is the effective zone of synaptic output, which is constant at 50 to 60% of dendritic field area, regardless of the cell's retinal location. Both type a and type b cells exhibit systematic increase in cell body size and dendritic field diameter, and systematic decrease in frequency of branching and of synaptic boutons with perpendicular distance from the visual streak. These rates of increase or decrease fall off considerably at distances greater than about 1.5 mm dorsal and ventral to the visual streak, but at this distance, the dendritic field diameters of cells in dorsal retina are about 65% larger than the diameters of cells in ventral retina. When type a and type b cells are closely compared, they are seen to differ in several respects. Branching patterns of type a and type b cells differ slightly, the latter being more highly branched, and the normalized branching frequency histograms, characteristic for each type, remain constant with changing retinal position. At the same retinal location type a cells always have larger dendritic field diameters than type b cells. This difference is significant in ventral retina, out to a distance of at least 4.5 mm from the streak. The maximum percentage difference in size occurs not at mid-visual streak, but about 1.5 mm ventral to the streak. The population statistics of dendritic field overlap and areal dendritic coverage have been calculated using published data on cell densities. It is concluded that overlap is extraordinarily high (k greater than 25), more than 10 times that calculated for retinal ganglion cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS) ER -