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The interphotoreceptor space. I. Postnatal ontogeny in mice and rats
Authors:L Feeney
Institution:John E. Weeks Memorial Laboratory of Ophthalmology, Department of Ophthalmology, University of Oregon Medical School, Portland, Oregon 97201 USA
Abstract:The postnatal ontogeny of the retinal interphotoreceptor space of mice and rats was studied by electron microscopy to elucidate the cytological developments in the surrounding cells relevant to the accumulation of extracellular glycosaminoglycans and glycoproteins constituting the interphotoreceptor matrix. This extracellular material at birth is principally the cell coat on all the immature cells that border the space at that time, but later additional weblike strands are seen in the space. The cells delimiting the space in the adult are the pigment epithelium (PE), the photoreceptors, and the glial cells of Müller. The Golgi complex of the PE is large at birth but involutes by day 15. Melanogenesis is the principal activity in this cell at birth but as the melanin granules mature, lysosomes gradually accumulate. Growth of the apical microvilli of the PE is most pronounced between day 5 and 15, which is also the time of rapid expansion of the interphotoreceptor space. The Golgi complex of the photoreceptor enlarges during this interval also, and remains voluminous thereafter. Müller's cells insert only slender apical processes lacking in secretory vesicles, into the interphotoreceptor space. All the adult cells have a cell coat on the surfaces facing the interphotoreceptor space. Secretory vesicles were not identified in any of the cells impinging on the space.
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