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Glycinergic interplexiform cells make synaptic contact with amacrine cell bodies in goldfish retina
Author(s) -
Yazulla Stephen,
Studholme Keith M.
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
journal of comparative neurology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.855
H-Index - 209
eISSN - 1096-9861
pISSN - 0021-9967
DOI - 10.1002/cne.903100103
Subject(s) - glycine receptor , inner plexiform layer , amacrine cell , biology , retina , neuroscience , strychnine , postsynaptic potential , outer plexiform layer , ganglion cell layer , synapse , microbiology and biotechnology , glycine , biophysics , biochemistry , receptor , amino acid
Recent works utilizing glycine‐immunoreactivity (IR) and combined Golgi impregnation and 3 H‐glycine uptake autoradiography indicate that glycinergic interplexiform cells (IPC) may synapse upon cell bodies in the inner nuclear and ganglion cell layers in fish retina. This possibility was investigated with immunocytochemical techniques using presynaptic and postsynaptic markers for glycinergic neurons: a monoclonal antibody (mAb 7A) against the 93 kDa subunit of the strychnine‐sensitive glycine receptor and a polyclonal antiserum against a glycine/BSA conjugate. Synaptic contacts onto the lateral and proximal surfaces of amacrine cell bodies and onto the distal surface of cells in the ganglion cell layer were identified with both probes. The contacts were rare with one contacted amacrine cell/section of 500 linear μm. Serial 1‐μm sections were processed alternately for glycine and GABA antisera using postembedding techniques at the light microscopic level. Glycine‐IR processes + boutons were apposed to GABA‐IR cell bodies in 16 of 17 examples, indicating that the dendro‐somatic contacts were onto GABA‐immunoreactive amacrine cell bodies. In context of other published morphological data, we suggest that the dendro‐somatic synapses were derived from glycinergic IPCs. Glycinergic IPCs receive input from GABAergic horizontal cells and, via a shunt conductance produced by the dendro‐somatic contacts, may be involved in controlling the sensitivity, temporal, or spatial properties of amacrine cell responses to large field illuminatio.