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Electron microscopic study of synaptic contacts between photoreceptors and HRP‐filled horizontal cells in the turtle retina

51

Citations

47

References

1986

Year

Abstract

The synaptic contacts between photoreceptors and horizontal cells in the retina of the turtle (Geoclemys) were studied. Horizontal cells were classified into three types according to their intracellularly recorded spectral responses: luminosity, biphasic chromaticity, and triphasic chromaticity horizontal cells (LHC, BHC, and THC). These cells were then iontophoretically filled with horseradish peroxidase (HRP). The various types of photoreceptors located within the dendritic field of the HRP-filled horizontal cells were identified either as rods or as one of the three chromatic types of cones; the latter were identified by the presence and colors of their oil droplets in the inner segments. The synaptic contacts between photoreceptors and labeled horizontal cells were then investigated by light and electron microscopy of serial sections on three LHCs, two BHCs, and one THC. LHCs made synaptic contacts with about 100 photoreceptors, including rods and three chromatic types of cones; two-thirds of these photoreceptors contacted the cell body and the remaining its axon terminal. BHCs contacted about 30 cones; red-, green-, and blue-sensitive cones in the ratio of 3:4:1. THC contacted 20 cones; red- and blue-sensitive cones in the ratio of 2:1. The dendritic processes of HRP-filled horizontal cells were found as the lateral element of the ribbon synaptic complexes. The present finding suggests that the responses of BHC and THC to red flashes are fed directly from red-sensitive cones in addition to the feedback pathway of cone-horizontal cell connections in the previous studies.

References

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