Elsevier

Neuroscience

Volume 28, Issue 1, 1989, Pages 219-232
Neuroscience

Generation of retinal cells in the wallaby, Setonix brachyurus (quokka)

https://doi.org/10.1016/0306-4522(89)90246-7Get rights and content

Abstract

We have examined the generation of retinal cells in the wallaby, Setonix brachyurus (quokka). Animals received a single injection of tritiated thymidine between postnatal days 1–85 and retinae were examined at postnatal day 100. Retinae were sectioned, processed for autoradiography and stained with Cresyl Violet. Ganglion cells were labelled by injection of horseradish peroxidase into the optic tracts and primary visual centres. Other cells were classified according to their morphology and location.

Retinal cell generation takes place in two phases. During the first phase, which concludes by postnatal day 30, cells destined to lie in all three cellular layers of the retina are produced. In the second phase, which starts by postnatal day 50, cell generation is almost entirely restricted to the inner and outer nuclear layers. Cells produced in the first phase are orthotopic and displaced ganglion cells, displaced and orthotopic amacrine cells, horizontal cells and cones. Glia in the ganglion cell layer, orthotopic amacrine cells, bipolar and horizontal cells, Muller glia, and rods are generated in the second phase.

Cells became heavily labelled with tritiated thymidine in the central retina before postnatal day 7, over the entire retina (panretinal) by postnatal day 7 and from postnatal day 18, only in the periphery. The second phase of cell generation is initiated at P50, in a region extending from the optic nerve head to mid-temporal retina. Subsequently, cells are generated in annuli, centred on mid-temporal retina, which are seen at progressively more peripheral locations. Therefore, cell addition to the inner and outer nuclear layers continues for longer in peripheral than in mid-temporal retina.

We suggest that such later differential cell addition to the inner and outer nuclear layers contributes to an asymmetric increase in retinal area. This non-uniform growth presumably results in more expansion of the ganglion cell layer peripherally than in mid-temporal retina and may play a role in establishing density gradients of ganglion cells.

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