Publication | Closed Access
New Dopaminergic and Indoleamine-accumulating Cells in the Growth Zone of Goldfish Retinas After Neurotoxic Destruction
104
Citations
14
References
1982
Year
Goldfish RetinasGrowth ZoneFirst Dopaminergic CellsOptogeneticsJuvenile GoldfishGanglion CellRetinaDopaminergic InnervationHealth SciencesOphthalmologyNervous SystemVertebrate VisionNew DopaminergicPhotoreceptor CellDevelopmental BiologyExperimental OphthalmologyNeuroanatomyNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemMedicine
Juvenile goldfish were allowed to grow for 3 months after dopaminergic or indoleamine-accumulating cells in their retinas had been destroyed by intravitreal injection of 6-hydroxydopamine or 5,7-dihydroxytryptamine, respectively. New cells of each type were found growing in concentric rings at the margin of the retina. To compensate for the loss of dopaminergic innervation in retinas treated with 6-hydroxydopamine, cells in the growth zone appeared to proliferate at a higher rate than those in untreated retinas and long processes were extended into the retina by the first dopaminergic cells to appear.
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