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1.
The early patterns of retinal degeneration were studied in the goldfish after optic nerve sectioning by l.m. and e.m. Beginning on the 2nd postsurgical day there was an initial degeneration of neurons in the ganglion cell and inner nuclear layers of the central retina. Massive ganglion cell degeneration in the whole retina (60%) as well as degeneration of neurons in inner and outer nuclear layer of the peripheral retina was evident around the 7th postsurgical day. The early degenerating cells appeared to be cones and cone bipolars.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The ultrastructural and transmitter development of lumbar sympathetic ganglia was studied in embryonic day-6 through-18 chick embryos. At embryonic day 6, ganglia are populated by two morphologically distinct types of neuronal cells and Schwann cell precursors. The neuronal populations basically comprise a granule-containing cell and a developing principal neuron. Granule-containing cells have, an irregularly shaped or oval nucleus with small clumps of chromatin attached to the inner nuclear membrane and numerous large (up to 300 nm) membrane-limited granules. Developing principal neurons display a more rounded vesicular nucleus with evenly distributed chromatin, prominent nucleoli, more developed areas of Golgi complexes, and rough endoplasmic reticulum and large dense-core vesicles up to 120 nm in diameter. There are granule-containing cells with fewer and smaller granules which still display the nucleus typical for granule-containing cells. These granule-containing cells may develop toward developing principal neurons or the resting state of granule-containing cells found in older ganglia. Both granule-containing cells and developing principal neurons proliferate and can undergo degeneration. At embryonic day 9 there are far more developing principal neurons than granule-containing cells. Most granule-containing cells have very few granules. Mitotic figures and signs of cell degeneration are still apparent. Synapse-like terminals are found on both developing principal neurons and granule-containing cells. Ganglionic development from embryonic day 11 through 18 comprises extensive maturation of developing principal neurons and a numerical decline of granule-containing cells. Some granule-containing cells with very few and small granules still persist at embryonic day 18. The mean catecholamine content per neuron increases from 0.044 femtomol at embryonic day 7 to 0.22 femtomol at embryonic day 15. Concomitantly, there is a more than 6-fold increase in tyrosine hydroxylase activity. Adrenaline has a 14% share in total catecholamines at embryonic day 15. Somatostatin levels are relatively high at embryonic day 7 (1.82 attomol per neuron) and are 10-fold reduced by embryonic day 15. Our results suggest the presence of two morphologically distinct sympathetic neuronal precursors at embryonic day 6: one with a binary choice to become a principal neuron or to die, the other one, a granule-containing cell, which alternatively may develop into a principal neuron, acquire a resting state or die.  相似文献   

3.
Spontaneous, transitory feminization of the left embryonic testis occurs in the majority of male Japanese quails from day 11 of incubation until the 2nd day after hatching. The feminized gonad is composed of a testicular part and of an ovarian-like cortical region, which develops outside the tunica albuginea. The cortical region contains numerous germ cells some of which enter meiosis on day 11 (i.e. at the time characteristic of female germ cells) and reach pachytene on day 14. Cortical regions are best developed on day 16 (day of hatching), but regression, accompanied by degeneration of many germ cells, begins shortly afterwards. The mechanism of feminization of the left embryonic testis is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
We applied a series of selective antibodies for labeling the various cell types in the mammalian retina. These were used to identify the progressive loss of neurons in the FVB/N mouse, a model of early onset retinal degeneration produced by a mutation in the pde6b gene. The immunocytochemical studies, together with electroretinogram (ERG) recordings, enabled us to examine the time course of the degenerative changes that extended from the photoreceptors to the ganglion cells at the proximal end of the retina. Our study indicates that photoreceptors in FVB/N undergo a rapid degeneration within three postnatal weeks, and that there is a concomitant loss of retinal neurons in the inner nuclear layer. Although the loss of rods was detected at an earlier age during which time M- and S-opsin molecules were translocated to the cone nuclei; by 6 months all cones had also degenerated. Neuronal remodeling was also seen in the second-order neurons with horizontal cells sprouting processes proximally and dendritic retraction in rod-driven bipolar cells. Interestingly, the morphology of cone-driven bipolar cells were affected less by the disease process. The cellular structure of inner retinal neurons, i.e., ChAT amacrine cells, ganglion cells, and melanopsin-positive ganglion cells did not exhibit any gross changes of cell densities and appeared to be relatively unaffected by the massive photoreceptor degeneration in the distal retina. However, Muller cell processes began to express GFAP at their endfeet at p14, and it climbed progressively to the cell’s distal ends by 6 months. Our study indicates that FVB/N mouse provides a useful model with which to assess possible intervention strategies to arrest photoreceptor death in related diseases.  相似文献   

5.
During development of the nervous system, large numbers of neurons are overproduced and then eliminated by programmed cell death. Puma is a BH3-only protein that is reported to be involved in the initiation of developmental programmed cell death in rodent retinal neurons. The expression and cellular localization of Puma in retinal tissues during development are not, however, well known. Here the authors report the expression pattern of Puma during retinal development in the rat. During the period of programmed cell death in the retina, Puma was expressed in some members of each retinal neuron, including retinal ganglion cells, amacrine cells, bipolar cells, horizontal cells, and photoreceptor cells. Although the developmental programmed cell death of cholinergic amacrine cells is known to be independent of Puma, this protein was expressed in almost all their dendrites and somata of cholinergic amacrine cells at postnatal age 2 to 3 weeks, and it continued to be detected in cholinergic dendrites in the inner plexiform layer for up to 8 weeks after birth. These results suggest that Puma has some significant roles in retinal neurons after eye opening, especially that of cholinergic amacrine cells, in addition to programmed cell death of retinal neurons before eye opening.  相似文献   

6.
Sobkowicz  H.M.  Inagaki  M.  August  B.K.  Slapnick  S.M. 《Brain Cell Biology》1999,28(1):17-38
The bronx waltzer (vb) mutation in the mouse results in the degeneration of most but not all of the primary auditory receptors, the inner hair cells, and their afferent neurons. We analyzed the ultrastructure of 94 inner hair cells in the intact postnatal mutant mouse and in neonatal cochleas in culture to understand the pathogenesis of hair cell death and to detect factors that may prevent it. The vb spiral neurons of the bronx waltzer display two distinctive features: some of them continue to divide mitotically for at least seven postnatal days, and the type I radial fibers that innervate inner hair cells display a deficiency in immunoexpression of GAD. The growing endings of spiral neurons converge around the inner hair cells or, in their absence, invade the outer hair cell region. Their profuse sprouting among inner spiral sulcus cells contributes to the characteristic ultrastructural picture of the bv cochlea. During the first three days after birth, 40% of the inner hair cells appear normal and innervated, 40% are mostly denervated and degenerating, and 20% are immature, with minimal or no neuronal appositions. However, in mutants 6 days and older only a few inner hair cells survive, and these show either normal or superfluous afferent innervation and axosomatic GABAergic efferent innervation. Degeneration of inner hair cells begins with a distention of the nuclear envelope and the ribosomal endoplasmic reticulum. The outer nuclear membrane eventually breaks, and exudate fills the cell interior. The cellular edema leads to cell death. We propose that success or failure in synaptic acquisition is a decisive factor in the survival or decline of the mutant inner hair cells. We also suggest that the developmental delay in maturation of the spiral ganglion neurons (type I) and the failure in their synaptogenesis may be caused by an impairment in neurotrophin (NT3/BDNF) synthesis by their mutant receptor cells.  相似文献   

7.
Bi A  Cui J  Ma YP  Olshevskaya E  Pu M  Dizhoor AM  Pan ZH 《Neuron》2006,50(1):23-33
The death of photoreceptor cells caused by retinal degenerative diseases often results in a complete loss of retinal responses to light. We explore the feasibility of converting inner retinal neurons to photosensitive cells as a possible strategy for imparting light sensitivity to retinas lacking rods and cones. Using delivery by an adeno-associated viral vector, here, we show that long-term expression of a microbial-type rhodopsin, channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2), can be achieved in rodent inner retinal neurons in vivo. Furthermore, we demonstrate that expression of ChR2 in surviving inner retinal neurons of a mouse with photoreceptor degeneration can restore the ability of the retina to encode light signals and transmit the light signals to the visual cortex. Thus, expression of microbial-type channelrhodopsins, such as ChR2, in surviving inner retinal neurons is a potential strategy for the restoration of vision after rod and cone degeneration.  相似文献   

8.
Laser beam ablation of spiral ganglion neurons was performed in seven organotypic cultures of the newborn mouse cochlea between 5 and 8 days in vitro, with a recovery period of from 18 hours to 3 days. Direct somatic injury (laser or mechanical) inflicted on hair cells does not necessarily cause their death; many of them survive, repair damage and re-establish their neurosensory connections. By contrast, laser irradiation and ablation of their afferent spiral ganglion neurons causes a most spectacular degeneration of sensory cells within 18–48 hours after the insult. Ultrastructurally, the degenerated hair cells—characteristically the inner hair cells—display “dark-cell vacuolar degeneration” that combines the signs of apoptotic death (the peripheral condensation of nuclear chromatin and nuclear pyknosis) with signs of cell edema, vacuolization and necrosis. The ultimate condensation of the cytoplasm gives the dead cells a jet black appearance. The irradiated spiral ganglion neurons die displaying similar pathological characteristics. The extent and locus of inner hair cell degeneration correspond to that of ablated spiral ganglion neurons: ultimately the ablation of one neuron causes degeneration of a single inner hair cell within the closest radial segment of the afferent innervation. The elimination of spiral ganglion neurons by mechanical means does not affect hair cell survival. It is inferred that the laser pulse acts as a stimulus depolarizing the neuronal membrane of the spiral ganglion neurons and their radial fibers and causing the excitotoxic death of their synaptic sensory cells through excessive stimulation of the glutamatergic receptors. Reciprocal pre-and postsynaptic synapses between the afferent dendrites and inner hair cells in culture could possibly serve as entryways of the stimulus. The pathogenesis of this apparent transsynaptically-induced apoptotic death of inner hair cells will be further examined in culture.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Five monoclonal antibodies reacting with intracellular constituents of Purkinje cells were investigated by means of indirect immunofluorescence on fresh-frozen sections of the cerebellum and retina from developing and adult normal and mutant mice. Antibodies PC1, PC2 and PC3, which recognize Purkinje cells, but no other cerebellar neuron type, label these cells from day 4 onward. PC4 antigen is expressed in addition to Purkinje cells also in granule cells and neurons of deep cerebellar nuclei and appears in Purkinje cells at day 4. M1 antigen (Lagenaur et al. 1980) is first detectable in Purkinje cell bodies by day 5; it is also detectable in deep cerebellar neurons. In the adult retina, only PC4 antigen is detectably expressed and is localized in the inner segments of photoreceptor cells.The neurological mutants weaver, reeler,jimpy and wobbler show detectable levels of these antigens in Purkinje cells. However, the mutants staggerer and Purkinje cell degeneration are abnormal in expression PC1, PC2, PC3, and M1 antigens. Staggerer never starts to express the antigens during development, whereas Purkinje cell degeneration first expresses the antigens, but then loses antigen expression after day 23. PC4 antigen is detectable in the remaining Purkinje cells in staggerer and Purkinje cell degeneration mice at all ages tested in this study. Deep cerebellar neurons are positive for both antigens, PC4 and M1, in all mutants and at all ages studied. In retinas of staggerer and Purkinje cell degeneration mutants, PC4 antigen is normally detectable in the inner segments of photoreceptor cells, even when these have started to degenerate in the case of Purkinje cell degeneration.  相似文献   

10.
Although the vestibular and cochlear branches of the VIIIth cranial nerve originate embryologically from the same primordia, results of the present investigation confirm previous findings indicating that the vestibular branch may be more plastic with respect to recovery after surgical insult than the cochlear division. In this report we show ultrastructural details of changes undergone by the vestibular nerve after surgery. Dendrites peripheral to the vestibular nerve ganglion (VNG) were severed by surgically removing the vestibular end organs; the squirrel monkeys were then allowed to recuperate, and tested for their vestibulospinal and vestibulo-oculomotor functions behaviorally. However, behavior deficits resulting from the injury are reported separately. The vestibular nerves excised from the internal acoustic meatus and the temporal bones were examined histologically for changes of VNG and fibers from day 1 to 1,247 days after labyrinthectomy. Light- and electron-microscopic examinations indicated that some perikarya and some fibers of the VNG remained in the ganglionic matrix for up to 1,247 days, the longest period studied, after the operation. Fibers extended toward the remodeled inner ear space in the absence of appropriate sensory cell targets. The surviving neurons and fibers exhibited various degrees of wallerian-like degeneration at first, but many of them retained ultracellular organelles and integrity even after 1,247 days. Since vestibular perikarya are bipolar, the unsevered fibers that project to the brainstem could retain functional synaptic connections, a possibility that is now under investigation. Schwann cells in the ganglionic matrix may also have contributed to vestibular neuron survival by providing the proper nourishment. Morphometric measurements determined that neurons remaining in the ganglion had significantly smaller cross-sectional areas than normal neurons.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
The morphological changes in erythroid cells and their nuclei in the circulation of fetuses of the Syrian hamster were investigated by use of an image-processing system. The analysis included monitoring of nuclear condensation, nuclear periphralization (access of the nucleus to the cell membrane), enucleation, density of cells, and changes in cell size from day 9 of gestation to day 5 after birth. The yolk-sac-derived erythroid cells made rapid progress in nuclear condensation on day 11, while this process proceeded at a much lower rate after day 12 of gestation. The peripheralization of nuclei started on day 10 and reached a maximum on day 11. The frequency of enucleated cells was below 2% on day 11, while it increased to 30% on day 12. Extruded nuclei, most of which were accompanied by a small quantity of cytoplasm, appeared in the circulation on day 12. The most frequently observed diameter of enucleated erythrocytes, which was 10–10.5 μm on day 12, fell gradually to 8–9 μm on day 14. By contrast, the shift from fetal liver erythrocytes to adult erythrocytes occurred in a discontinuous manner. Adult-type erythrocytes were detected after birth with diameters of 5.5–6 μm. Our data allows us to present the schedule of morphological changes during embryonic erythropoiesis and show that the developmental behavior of "primitive" yolk-sac-derived erythroid cells is more closely correlated with that of the "definitive" fetal liver cells than has been considered to be the case to date.  相似文献   

12.
We investigated the morphological changes of horizontal cells after postnatal photoreceptor degeneration in the developing FVB/N mouse retina, using immunocytochemistry with anti-calbindin D-28K. From postnatal day 14 (P14) onwards, processes emerging from horizontal cells descend into the inner plexiform layer (IPL) and ramify mainly in stratum 1 of the IPL. Electron microscopy revealed that the descending processes make synaptic contacts with bipolar cells in the outer plexiform layer. Our results clearly demonstrate that loss of photoreceptor cells induces the reorganization of horizontal cell processes in the retinas of FVB/N mice as they mature.  相似文献   

13.
Three basic types of cells are distinguished in the rat vomeronasal epithelium at birth: bipolar neurons, supporting cells, and basal cells. Neurons at this time include both immature and differentiated cells. By the end of the first postnatal week, all neurons show morphological signs of maturity in their cytoplasm, including abundant granular and smooth endoplasmic reticulum, neurotubules, dense lamellar bodies, apical centrioles, and tufts of microvilli. During the third week microvilli are more frequently encountered and appear to be longer and more branched. Supporting cells appear well-developed by the second day after birth. During the first ten days of life, supporting cells lose their centrioles and all of the complex associated with ciliary generation in the apical zone. Basal cells appear to be more numerous in newborns than in older animals. Protrusions projecting into the lumen are frequently observed in the epithelium of newborn animals, both on the dendrites of neurons and on supporting cells. After the third week, such protrusions are only observed in the transitional zone between the sensory and the non-sensory epithelia of the vomeronasal tubes. In this transitional zone, a fourth cell type showing apical protrusions with microvilli differentiates. Cytoplasm in this type resembles that of neighboring ciliated cells but has no cilia or centrioles. These transitional cells are considered to be cells in an intermediate state of differentiation, between that of the differentiated neurons and supporting cells of the sensory epithelium and that of the predominate ciliated cells of the non-sensory epithelium. The results suggest that by the end of the third week the vomeronasal epithelium is morphologically mature.  相似文献   

14.
Hearing loss can be caused by primary degeneration of spiral ganglion neurons or by secondary degeneration of these neurons after hair cell loss. The replacement of auditory neurons would be an important step in any attempt to restore auditory function in patients with damaged inner ear neurons or hair cells. Application of beta-bungarotoxin, a toxin derived from snake venom, to an explant of the cochlea eradicates spiral ganglion neurons while sparing the other cochlear cell types. The toxin was found to bind to the neurons and to cause apoptotic cell death without affecting hair cells or other inner ear cell types as indicated by TUNEL staining, and, thus, the toxin provides a highly specific means of deafferentation of hair cells. We therefore used the denervated organ of Corti for the study of neuronal regeneration and synaptogenesis with hair cells and found that spiral ganglion neurons obtained from the cochlea of an untreated newborn mouse reinnervated hair cells in the toxin-treated organ of Corti and expressed synaptic vesicle markers at points of contact with hair cells. These findings suggest that it may be possible to replace degenerated neurons by grafting new cells into the organ of Corti.  相似文献   

15.
The inner ear spiral ganglion is populated by bipolar neurons connecting the peripheral sensory receptors, the hair cells, with central neurons in auditory brain stem nuclei. Hearing impairment is often a consequence of hair cell death, e.g., from acoustic trauma. When deprived of their peripheral targets, the spiral ganglion neurons (SGNs) progressively degenerate. For effective clinical treatment using cochlear prostheses, it is essential to maintain the SGN population. To investigate their survival dependence, synaptogenesis, and regenerative capacity, adult mouse SGNs were separated from hair cells and studied in vitro in the presence of various neurotrophins and growth factors. Coadministration of fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF-2) and glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) provided support for long-term survival, while FGF-2 alone could strongly promote neurite regeneration. Fibroblast growth factor receptor FGFR-3-IIIc was found to upregulate and translocate to the nucleus in surviving SGNs. Surviving SGNs formed contacts with other SGNs after they were deprived of the signals from the hair cells. In coculture experiments, neurites extending from SGNs projected toward hair cells. Interestingly, adult mouse spiral ganglion cells could carry out both symmetric and asymmetric cell division and give rise to new neurons. The authors propose that a combination of FGF-2 and GDNF could be an efficient route for clinical intervention of secondary degeneration of SGNs. The authors also demonstrate that the adult mammalian inner ear retains progenitor cells, which could commit neurogenesis.  相似文献   

16.
L-Glutamate, a putative photoreceptor cell neurotransmitter, causes thinning of the inner layers of the retina and has been used for preparing biologically fractionated photoreceptor cells. However, it is possible that absence of the inner retinal layers may affect the remaining retina, and/or glutamate may directly affect photoreceptor cells. We evaluated quantitatively the effects of L-glutamate on the developing photoreceptor cells by measuring the rod photoreceptor cell-specific protein, opsin. We purified rat rhodopsin and used it as the standard for measuring opsin content of rat retinas with competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Various concentrations of glutamate were injected into 7-day-old rats, and the effects of the amino acid concentration on opsin expression were determined on postnatal day 14. Inner layers of the retina degenerated when 10 microliters or 15 microliters of 2.4 M glutamate/gram body weight was administered subcutaneously. Opsin content of these glutamate-treated retinas decreased significantly compared with control retinas. We administered glutamate to rats at various stages of development and determined the effects by light microscopy on postnatal day 14. The administration of glutamate resulted in no degeneration of the inner retina if injected on postnatal day 1 or 2, degeneration of the inner retina between day 3 to 7, and again, no degeneration after postnatal day 13. Opsin content decreased significantly when glutamate was administered between postnatal day 1 to 7, but not after day 13, the day the blood-retinal barrier seems to reach maturity. Our findings indicate that systemic administration of L-glutamate affects the expression of opsin in the developing rod photoreceptor cells.  相似文献   

17.
Summary The recently discovered indoleamine-accumulating retinal neurons were studied electron microscopically after destruction of the dopaminergic retinal neurons and subsequent labeling with 5,6-dihydroxytryptamine. These observations confirm earlier fluorescence microscopical studies on the distribution of the indoleamine-accumulating neurons in the rabbit retina. Their perikarya are known to be located in the inner nuclear layer (INL) among the amacrine cell bodies. Their processes are found only in the inner plexiform layer (IPL), most of them in the innermost third part of that layer. The indoleamine-accumulating terminals are pre- and postsynaptic to bipolar neurons in the innermost sublayer of the IPL. Reciprocal synapses are probably the rule. The synaptic vesicles of indoleamine-accumulating synapses onto bipolar cells are arranged in globular clusters around a central electron dense, round body. A number of synapses formed by unlabeled amacrine neurons with postsynaptic indoleamine-accumulating elements were also detected. These synapses were mainly found in the outermost third of the IPL. Synaptic contacts between presynaptic indoleamine-accumulating neurons and postsynaptic unlabeled processes of amacrine cells are very rare.  相似文献   

18.
Alternative splicing is the primary mechanism by which a limited number of protein-coding genes can generate proteome diversity. We have investigated the role of the alternative-splicing factor Sfrs1, an arginine/serine-rich (SR) protein family member, during mouse retinal development. Loss of Sfrs1 function during embryonic retinal development had a profound effect, leading to a small retina at birth. In addition, the retina underwent further degeneration in the postnatal period. Loss of Sfrs1 function resulted in the death of retinal neurons that were born during early to mid-embryonic development. Ganglion cells, cone photoreceptors, horizontal cells and amacrine cells were produced and initiated differentiation. However, these neurons subsequently underwent cell death through apoptosis. By contrast, Sfrs1 was not required for the survival of the neurons generated later, including later-born amacrine cells, rod photoreceptors, bipolar cells and Müller glia. Our results highlight the requirement of Sfrs1-mediated alternative splicing for the survival of retinal neurons, with sensitivity defined by the window of time in which the neuron was generated.  相似文献   

19.
The intrinsic mechanisms that promote the degeneration of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) following the activation of N-Methyl-D-aspartic acid-type glutamate receptors (NMDARs) are unclear. In this study, we have investigated the role of downstream regulatory element antagonist modulator (DREAM) in NMDA-mediated degeneration of the retina. NMDA, phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), and MK801 were injected into the vitreous humor of C57BL/6 mice. At 12, 24, and 48 hours after injection, expression of DREAM in the retina was determined by immunohistochemistry, western blot analysis, and electrophoretic mobility-shift assay (EMSA). Apoptotic death of cells in the retina was determined by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferace dUTP nick end labeling (TUNEL) assays. Degeneration of RGCs in cross sections and in whole mount retinas was determined by using antibodies against Tuj1 and Brn3a respectively. Degeneration of amacrine cells and bipolar cells was determined by using antibodies against calretinin and protein kinase C (PKC)-alpha respectively. DREAM was expressed constitutively in RGCs, amacrine cells, bipolar cells, as well as in the inner plexiform layer (IPL). NMDA promoted a progressive decrease in DREAM levels in all three cell types over time, and at 48 h after NMDA-treatment very low DREAM levels were evident in the IPL only. DREAM expression in retinal nuclear proteins was decreased progressively after NMDA-treatment, and correlated with its decreased binding to the c-fos-DRE oligonucleotides. A decrease in DREAM expression correlated significantly with apoptotic death of RGCs, amacrine cells and bipolar cells. Treatment of eyes with NMDA antagonist MK801, restored DREAM expression to almost normal levels in the retina, and significantly decreased NMDA-mediated apoptotic death of RGCs, amacrine cells, and bipolar cells. Results presented in this study show for the first time that down-regulation of DREAM promotes the degeneration of RGCs, amacrine cells, and bipolar cells.  相似文献   

20.
Retinae of chick embryos and chicks one to six weeks after hatching were examined in ultrathin sections and in freeze-etch specimens. The development of the synaptic contacts between receptor cells and bipolar cells starts at the end of the second week of incubation with the enclosure of the dendritic prolongations, invaginating receptor terminals accompanied by the appearance of electron dense material at the synaptic contact sites. Subsequently receptor terminals become filled with synaptic vesicles which surround the synaptic lamellae that appear on the 16th day of incubation. The application of the freeze-fracture technique demonstrates that the differentiation of the synaptic membranes continues into the first week post hatching. E-fracture faces of the presynaptic membranes are characterized by crater-like structures, called synaptopores. Their number is rather small during incubation and increases after hatching. In the P-fracture faces of the dendrites, which are enclosed by the receptor terminals, small particle aggregations appear on the 16th day of incubation. These small particle clusters increase by the apposition of further particles which become arranged in lines and bring out a lattice-like aspect. This arrangement of particles in the inner part of the cell membrane is the morphological expression of the maturation process. The significance of these aggregations as a postsynaptic receptor for neurotransmitters in excitatory cells is discussed.  相似文献   

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